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At the NMHM (National Museum of Health and Medicine) in Washington DC.

Approximately 200X.

 

I broke out the polarizing filters last night. So far, polarized light is either a total bust or spectacular.

 

Suggesting a flower and a banana. Image was taken at 46000x using a Tecnai 12 Transmission Electron Microscope.

 

Courtesy of David C Walker

 

Image Details

Instrument used: JEMM

Magnification: 46000x

 

An old microscope slide from Bournemouth Universities collection

Les cils vibratiles battent l'eau et créent un flux tourbillonant bien visible ici qui entraîne des bactéries et de très petits flagellés vers l'orifice buccal où d'autres cils les attendent pour les transporter dans le système digestif.

Prélevés dans des petits lacs situés à 2200 m d'altitude.

Prepared slide from the Celestron 44412 kit

珪藻プレパラートを観察中、ヤシカマットを接眼レンズに押し当ててコリメート撮影してみた。

さすがに二眼レフでこれをやるのは、むつかしいものがある

 

Microscope: Eclipse E100 (10x)

f/3.5, 2sec.

 

YASHICA Mat-124G

Kodak EKTAR 100

taken with a sony ericsson

Section of a skin shed by a carpet python.

Similar image available for licensing through Getty Images:

www.gettyimages.com/detail/photo/scientific-laboratory-gl...

microscope collages for rookie

The best part of working in the field: having a microscope next to your bed.

Nikon D5000 w/ 35mm f/2 Nikkor-O

 

In Biology we're doing microscope stuff.

Artists impression of NanoRacks microscope and slides onboard the ISS

Just picked this up at Fry's for $69. Outstanding value, and simple as pie to hook up to the computer.

Brno - Hády, Czech republic

upper jurassic, oxfordian

The only thing that does not work in this microscope, is the optics... Although LEGO has produced a magnifying glass brick, I never even took an attempt at getting something between a 20- and 600-fold magnification from them...

 

This is a run-of-the-mill inverted microscope; an instrument you will find on any laboratory where tissue cultures are handled. It is inverted because with a normal microscope one looks down on the specimen. An inverted microscope allows the user to look from below the sample. With the thick dishes, flasks and plates used for tissue culture, and with a volume of nutrients on top of it, a lense can come a lot closer to the specimen from below! Getting closer, means higher magnifications are possible.

At the NMHM (National Museum of Health and Medicine) in Washington DC.

Prepared slide from the Celestron 44412 kit

Psylllium in macro modus.

This is the result of an accidental focus problem with a picture I was trying to take. I actually kinda like it.

I had a flash of curiosity when our youngest and I were looking at marsh water through a quality microscope I inherited from dad (who got it from his dad). I wondered if I could use my Olympus 770sw camera to capture the image in the eyepiece. The previous shot is what came of my first attempt.

Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2021

Photo taken with Helsinki Hacklab public lab cam.

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