View allAll Photos Tagged microscope
Here is my collection of lenses for macro and extreme macro photography. I just bought some new ones recently and I will test their quality soon.
Microscope lenses :
- No brand 4x 0.10
- Lomo 3,5x 0.10
- Lomo 8x 0.20
- Reichert Epi 8x 0.16
- Reichert Epi 16x 0.25
- Reichert Epi 45x 0.65
- Reichert Epi 65x 0.65
Lenses with diaphragm :
- Canon EF 100mm f2.8 macro
- Scheider Kreuznach Componon S 50mm f2.8
- Scheider Kreuznach Componon 28mm f4 (modified to f2.8)
- Reichert Neupolar 100mm
- Reichert Neupolar 50mm
- Dallmeyer super six anastigmat f=1" (25mm) f1.9
Saw this photo by Lynn, bought the parts to build the laboratory. Those medium blue slopes are hard to find...
You can buy the kit from brickyt.com/shop/microscope-lab/
Here is just a couple of Ian's Microscopes, on show in the lounge room. He has a few more all tucked away. I know one of them was made in Germany.
Illustration tweaked and cleaned up from a vintage Spanish-language microbiology book.
This makes me want to get all scientific.
Grossissement environ 600x - (Obj 100/1.25) + (Adapt NDPL 2x) + (APSC - fact x1.7) + (Crop image).
On distingue clairement des cellules sphériques plus volumineuses (Hétérocystes) qui ont la faculté de fixer l'azote de l'air pour le fournir aux cellules ( maillons plus petits de ces chaines) afin qu'elle puissent réaliser la photosynthése qui leur permet de fixer le carbone contenu daéns l'air sous forme de sucres. C'est ainsi que dès l'apparition de ce type de cyanobactéries sur Terre (1 à 1.3 milliards d'années), ces dernières ont commencé à réduire le CO2 (dioxyde de carbone) de l'atmosphère primitif (alors dépourvu d'oxygène) pour absorber le carbone et rejetter l'oxygène. C'est ainsi que s'est opéré l'accroissement de la teneur en oxygène de l'atmosphère terrestre que nous connaissons aujourd'hui.
Lorsque nous rejetons du CO2 dans l'atmosphère, nous détruisons nos propres ressources vitales issues de centaines de millions d'années de travail de ces cyanobactéries, auxquelles pourtant nous devons d'avoir pu voir le jour il y a à peine 1.5 million d'années. Ce processus porte un nom : AUTODESTRUCTION ...
A presentation gift from the Northern Illinois Lego Train Club for a patron.
- The scale is 1:1
- The specimen being examined is a synthetic life form (CGI to be exact)
Bought this cool attachment for my phone that let's me take super close ups of things , this is a braid I did on my Art Class robeccas hair (:
Using Helicon FB Tube.
Hand held in the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford.....Not too bad, I could have had more images for the stack if I hadn't got all self conscious about the bystanders...and me rattling off shots like a machine gun!
I left some water on the kitchen window sill so I could study it under the microscope. There were at least 5 distinct organisms living in there and it was fascinating to watch! Here is a video of a couple of them.
Taken with a C Baker microscope at 40x magnification, with a Canon 1100D attached to the eye piece with a special T-adapter. I don't have a proper working light source for this microscope so the images are darker than I would have liked.
Photographing things like pond water and other stuff under a microscope with my Canon R6
you can buy my art at james-sage.pixels.com/0