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Specimen: Damselfly eye. The image reveals the regular, crystal-like hexagonal lattice of the eye’s elements.
Technique: Projection of confocal stack, 20x objective.
(Dr. Igor Siwanowicz/Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology/Munich, Germany)
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The psychedelic mandala you are gazing at is a convergent beam electron diffraction pattern.
Electron diffraction refers to the wave nature of electrons. However, from a technical or practical point of view, it may be regarded as a technique used to study matter by firing electrons at a sample and observing the resulting interference pattern. This phenomenon is commonly known as the wave-particle duality, which states that the behavior of a particle of matter (in this case the incident electron) can be described by a wave. For this reason, an electron can be regarded as a wave much like sound or water waves. This technique is similar to X-ray and neutron diffraction.
Electron diffraction is most frequently used in solid state physics and chemistry to study the crystal structure of solids.
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Amaranthaceae pollen viewed with a transmission electron microscope.
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Freshwater algal cell named Cosmarium
Courtesy of Ken Bart
Image Details
Instrument used: Quanta Family
Magnification: 3149
Horizontal Field Width: 81 um
Vacuum: 1 x10-6 Torr
Voltage: 15 kV
Spot: 3
Working Distance: 11
Detector: Mixed SE & BSE
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Hot snowflake cuts through tin ball. Ion Beam milling demonstration.
Magnification: 12,000x
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Polarized light microscopy by Piotr Rotkiewicz
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Polarized light microscopy by Piotr Rotkiewicz
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Polarized light microscopy by Piotr Rotkiewicz
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The Casimir Effect: One of the measurable forces inside quantum vacuums that makes the idea of magnetoelectric quantum wheels plausible.