View allAll Photos Tagged cell
I wanted to share something that I deal with daily at work:
cells
I thought most people on flickr would not have seen this so I thought it would be interesting!
Cell Phones bring you closer to the person far from you
But take you away from the ones sitting next to you!
The image shows cell culture of human breast cancer conditionally reprogrammed cells. Fluorescence red color represents MHC-I, and nuclei are shown in blue.
This image was originally submitted as part of the NCI Cancer Close Up project.
This image is part of the NCI Cancer Close Up 2016 collection.
See also visualsonline.cancer.gov/closeup2016.
Credit: Ewa Krawczyk, National Cancer Institute \ Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, National Institutes of Health
These are the ones I made :D!! yay!!
I made mushrooms, sushi, onigiris,donuts,fruits,ice creams, sweets, junk food! :D
Red Blood Cells - Medical Illustration
Red blood cells, or erythrocytes, are the most common type of blood cell and the vertebrate organism's principal means of delivering oxygen (O2) to the body tissues via the blood flow through the circulatory system. They take up oxygen in the lungs or gills and release it while squeezing through the body's capillaries. These cells' cytoplasm is rich in haemoglobin, an iron-containing biomolecule that can bind oxygen and is responsible for the blood's red color. Red blood cells are also known as RBCs, red cells, red blood corpuscles (an archaic term), haematids, erythroid cells or erythrocytes.
www.geometricmedical.com/red-blood-cells
For more info, visit www.geometricmedical.com
For more 3D medical and scientific illustrations, visit: geometricmedical.com/medical-illustration
It's the Cells texture created in the Filter Forge plugin. It can be seamless tiled and rendered in any resolution without loosing details.
You can see the presets and download this texture for free on the Filter Forge site here — www.filterforge.com/filters/9482.html (created by Skybase)
To use this texture download Filter Forge 30-day trial version for free here — www.filterforge.com/download/
Hasselblad 501CM with Zeiss Distagon f3.5 60mm CF, Kodak Portra 400, developed in Tetenal Rapid C41
Developing time 8 mins at 30C. I kept getting uneven results with the standard 3.15 mins at 38C, so I tried the alternative process once more, this is a lot better.
This tug boat has been tied up in this spot for the last twenty years. It has been a family live aboard in Sausalito. The picture was taken on the Sun Set cruise with a Samsung Galaxy S-5.
A picture of Kersal Cells, Salford in 1983. This building was first erected in 1563 and is the second oldest building in Salford. It began as a Cluniac priory. It then became a private residence, the in the 1970s and 1980s became a public house, fell into disrepair and is now a semi detached house.
For more go to www.kersalflats.co.uk
Osteochondroretricular stem cells (red) are a newly identified type of bone stem cell that appears to be vital to skeletal development. Research on these stem cells may lead to treatments for osteoarthritis, osteoporosis and fractures.
Credit: Timothy C. Wang, M.D., Columbia University
This image is not owned by the NIH. It is shared with the public under license. If you have a question about using or reproducing this image, please contact the creator listed in the credits. All rights to the work remain with the original creator.
NIH support from: National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Kevin's Yamaha WR 400....ready to tear up the fire roads in the national forests in northern California
iPS cells reprogrammed from a woman's skin. Blue shows nuclei. Green and red indicate proteins found in reprogrammed cells but not in skin cells (TRA1-62 and NANOG). These cells can be matured into cells of the body, and used for studying models of disease.
The image was taken in the laboratory of Kathrin Plath at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Learn more about CIRM-funded stem cell research: www.cirm.ca.gov.
New Series: abstract analog textures
Polaroid Land Camera SX-70
Impossible PX100 First Flush (bruch)
manipulated
The staircases in each building group are enclosed by a giant object that represents the decade. In the 90s buildings, it's a giant cell phone.
This is the view down cell block seven at the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I encourage everyone to take the tour if you have time while you're visiting Philadelphia. A really amazing building with an amazing history that not too many people know about.
According to the Penitentiary website: In May 1833, architect John Haviland created a new model for Cell Block Seven, one with several advantages over earlier cell blocks at the site. The most noticeable difference between Cell Block Seven and the previous two story cell blocks – Four, Five & Six – is the 30 foot barrel vault ceiling. In addition, Haviland set the catwalks back so they did not hang over the first floor. This made the block brighter and contributed to the Cathedral - like atmosphere. When Cell Block Seven was finished in 1836, it marked the completion of the original construction.
This image shows a longitudinal section of a root tip of Maize (Zea mays). To the left of the image, the large, loosely packed cells of the root cap can be seen. These cells protect the actively dividing meristematic tissue as the root grows down through the soil. This meristematic tissue is located just to the right of the root cap, where the cells are small and undifferentiated. If you follow the lines of cells towards the right, you can see that they increase in length in the zone of elongation. To the right of this zone, the cells become further differentiated, eventually assuming the mature structure related to their function.
This image is taken from a slide in the Botanical slide collection, Department of Plant Sciences, Cambridge. The specimen had been stained with Safranin O and Fast Green and was captured using a confocal microscope. These stains are often used together as general stains on plant material prepared for light microscopy and between them they stain many subcellular structures. The resulting colours are due to a combination of the stains and fluorescent colours in the cells.
The length of the section is approximately 300 µm.
Image by J. Haseloff
For September's Monthly Scavenger Hunt.
Both cell and phone found in Alcatraz. It was pinker than I imagined in there.
I have a colleague who is a passionate beekeeper in his spare time. He brought two crates of frames to work just because I needed one small picture for our web.
Cell Munny
This is my piece for "Around the World in 80 Toys" show at Espionage Gallery in Australia.
4 inch Munny 100% hand painted with spray paint, acrylics, markers and matt varnish.
See more from my hometown: Celle Maybe more doors and windows could be interesting, and... you are welcome to visit my profile You should have a look on my Faves too.
Cell #7 by Sybilla Poortman & Meffi
Cell #7 lends a hand!
Thanks Sibi & Meffi! All the best to you...
Cancer is unchecked cell growth. Mutations in genes can cause cancer by accelerating cell division rates or inhibiting normal controls on the system, such as cell cycle arrest or programmed cell death. As a mass of cancerous cells grows, it can develop into a tumor.
Two shot vertorama with the TS-E. Had to crop out a lot because I was low to the ground and was unable to level my tripod. I need to get one of those hotshoe bubble levels!
The ability of cancer cells to move and spread depends on actin-rich core structures such as the podosomes (yellow) shown here in melanoma cells. Cell nuclei (blue), actin (red), and an actin regulator (green) are also shown.
This image was originally submitted as part of the 2015 NCI Cancer Close Up project and selected for exhibit.
See also visualsonline.cancer.gov/closeup
Credit: Julio C. Valencia, NCI Center for Cancer Research