View allAll Photos Tagged microscope

WIN_20150404_131222

 

An interesting look at everyday things.

I bought a cheap USB powered Microscope and then started exploring. Some of the images were very unexpected so I thought I would post a few.

 

2015

Source: E. C. Bolles Collection of Microscope Slides, San Diego Natural History Museum.

 

Image id: SDNHM_Microscope_Slides_001

Buttercup flower bud cross section, 4x, FLUO-C4, ZPMax, TDN, Pano

old potmeter 250K

40x magnification

Scientist using microscope with dna image in background

This is the hologram on the 50 euro. This was 400x zoom , so that writing is too small for a human eye to read.

perf board

40x magnification

Prepared slide from the Celestron 44412 kit

Red SMT LED 3 mm

-low current flowing-

40x magnification

Students in Dave Potter's Ichthyology class at Unity College dissect a variety of fish species during a lab period. They weighed, measured, and identified the specimens before removing the pharyngeal bone for further examination.

Four Images Fused In Photomatix -2,0,+2 and 0 with camera flash

Photos of the Kake AYS (Alaska Youth Stewards) using microscopes to inspect fungi, mosses, and other plants.

 

Kake, Alaska

 

Photographs by Lee House

 

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Photos not to be used without the permission of the Sustainable Southeast Partnership

400x DIC and green and red fluorescence

This cell dish contains live samples of cancer removed from the spinal cord.

Daphina recorded at 60X magnification.

0603 Green LED

40x magnification

Photos of the Kake AYS (Alaska Youth Stewards) using microscopes to inspect fungi, mosses, and other plants.

 

Kake, Alaska

 

Photographs by Lee House

 

--

  

Photos not to be used without the permission of the Sustainable Southeast Partnership

Processed with VSCO with p5 preset

Human hair, hand held, pointed down the lens of a microscope

11.6.2010, Microscope Night

 

Machine Project artist in residency at Hammer Museum.

 

Photo by Marianne Williams.

IC socket

20x magnification

Dissecting microscope photo of some fish I'm raising! That one... it's looking at you. :)

The last detail I want to show you is the power switch on the back. I just had to have a tumbler switch for the microscope, one that had to be functional! This was something that gave me quite a headache from figuring out how... Beside the switch is the power inlet, a redundancy of course, because unlike its real-life counterparts, this microscope is battery powered!

4x objective

0.10 N.A.

HD Video

 

Measured Group 4, Element 2

17.9 line pairs/mm = 55.9 microns per line pair = 49 pixels in this image.

 

0.876 pixels/micron

876 pixels/mm

Amalie Gravelle (UiO) Investigating copepods in the lab on board RV Kronprins Haakon,. Credit: Nansen Legacy/Pernille Amdahl, MET

Professor of Biology and Microbiology Robert Wise, works on the electron microscope in Halsey science center. Thursday, February 28, 2019.

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