FAIRSpectra - Enabling the FAIRification of Spectroscopy and Spectrometry
RPS( Royal Photographic Society) Scientific Imaging Award 2016
1. Mandibles of a water spider, cleared and mounted in Canada balsam.
2. These incredible microscopic images of creatures, vitamins,
crystals and even a fetus are to be recognised with an award
from the Royal Photographic Society.
They are taken by Spike Walker, from Retford, who has been
taking microscopic images for 70 years.
RPS (Royal Photographic Society )Scientific Imaging Award 2016
3. Cell division in a Desmid,Micrasterias apiculata (a type of one-celled freshwater alga).
5. While this might look a bit like
Turkish Delight, it is really the
plantar skin of a gosling's toe, with
the epidermis layer partly removed
to show the capillary bed.
11. This picture looks like it has been created by a graphic designer, it really shows ephedrine
vapour - a medication used to prevent low blood pressure - crystallising as it cools .
12. A single sperm is taken up in a micropipette and
inserted into a prepared egg cell which is held in
position by suction within a second micropipette.
20. This picture shows the stained cross section of the composite structure of a dandelion flower, showing individual flor.
21. blue and orange picture of a male dytiscus beetle using its suckers to grip the female during mating.
22. The calcareous test (shell) of a mounted
specimen of a tropical marine foram or
‘hole bearers’. They belong to the phylum
Foraminifera. The above specimen is from
the China Sea.
23. A cross section of the lining of the wall of an
artery is pictured on the right, with red
blood cells are pictured beside it on the left
24. This might look like a colourful textile, but the
picture really shows ascorbic acid (Vitamin C)
crystals from an aqueous solution.
25. The delicate basket-like arrangement of sensory nerve fibres around the base of a hair follicle as seen in a thick verticle section of cat skin.
26. Bacteria and the ciliate protozoa which feed on them, are pictured in water from a flower vase.
27. One of the pictures shows the cells of a sphagnum moss leaf .
28. These curious creatures are living Spionid
larvae from marine plankton - generally the
most common developmental stages found
in plankton samples.
29. Brain cells are pictured in a thick silver-stained
section of the medulla - a portion of the hindbrain
that controls functions such as breathing, digestion,
heart and blood vessel function, swallowing and
sneezing.