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In photography terms, the microscopes simply didn't have a quick enough shutter speed, or a high enough framerate. Pulse-Pounding. To improve on those efforts, the Arizona researchers designed ...
Electron microscope photography is cool, and it's been around for a while, but that doesn't mean that that they can't still find cool things to take pictures of. Take a record for example.
David Scharf is one of the world's leading names in electron microscope photography: those giant, luminescent photos of tiny things like bugs, dust, and nerves. Support for LAist comes from.
While the original electron microscope arrived in the early 1930’s (there’s still a controversy to this day over who invented the very first one), scientists have relied on what are known as ...
Rochester Institute of Technology professor and science photographer Ted Kinsman captures an unseen side of cannabis in his new book, "Cannabis: Marijuana Under The Microscope". These scanning ...
Wired Classic: This gallery from December 2010 is an all-time reader favorite. If you've ever wondered what snowflakes truly look like, spend a few moments admiring their structure up close in ...
The first time photographer Rose-Lynn Fisher looked at a bee’s eye magnified through a scanning electron microscope, she saw that same repeated hexagonal pattern. She was struck by the symmetry.
But the electromagnetic lenses inside electron microscopes are particularly blurry. Looking through a typical electron microscope, according to Muller, is like looking at light through a beer bottle.
Photographer Rose-Lynn Fisher uses a powerful scanning electron microscope to capture all of a bee’s microscopic structures in stunning detail. Above: a bee’s antennae sockets, magnified 43 times.
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) blasts a beam of electrons through a very thin sample of material, which is a lot like how traditional film photography already works on the “macro ...
Bernbaum used a scanning electron microscope, known for creating sculptural, 3D views. A field emission gun fires electrons down a vacuum chamber and past electromagnets that focus them into a beam.
Using a Scanning Electron Microscope, retired scientific photographer Steve Gschmeissner, 61, from Bedford, is able to magnify insects by up to a million times. The results show incredibly ...