Monday, April 16, 2012

Micro-Photography turned out to be a piece of art


Crystals evaporated from solution of magnesium sulfate and tartaric acid (50x), Polarized Light. / Richard H. Lee, Argonne National Laboratory. Courtesy of Nikon Small World.

Crystals of Influenza virus

Quantum dot nano crystals deposited on a silicon substrate (200x), Polarized reflected light. / Seth A. Coe-Sullivan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Courtesy of Nikon Small World.


Doxorubin in methanol and dimethylbenzenesulfonic acid (80x),Polarized Light. / Lars BechNaarden, The Netherlands. Courtesy of Nikon Small World.

Gold residue and gold-coated bubbles in glassy matrix (20x), Brightfield. / David Smith, Queensland, Australia. Courtesy of Nikon Small World
Collapsed bubbles from an annealed experimental electronic sealing glass (55x), Reflected Light, Nomarski Differential Interference Contrast. / David Gnizak, Ferro Corp., Independence, Ohio. Courtesy of Nikon Small World 

Microscopic image of alcoholic drinks:Created by United States company Bevshots : Vodka

Microscopic image of snow crystals
Microscopic image of Champagne created by BevShots by crystallizing on a slide and photographed under a polarized light microscope. As the light refracts through the beverage crystals, the resulting photos have naturally magnificent colors and composition.
Photo-chemical reactions under sub-millisecond thermal heating
Kentucky cancer researcher Margaret Oechsli tinkers with microscopic photography. She recently put the antibiotic powder mitomycin under her lens and viewed through polarizing filters, the drug gave off colors that reveal its complex crystal structure.
Image of Dopamine crystals viewed under polarized light by UK photographer Spike Walker. 
A cetaminophen Crystals



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