The Digital Microscope Camera: Spying On The Invisible Worlds
The art of photography has allowed human beings, for the last one hundred and fifty years, to make a permanent visual record of their surroundings. Photographs are as commonplace now as words, and a world without cameras would not only be unimaginable; it would be unmanageable.
But what about the parts the physical world too small for either the human eye or the cameras eye to pick up? There is as much, or more, going on beyond our range of vision as there is within it, and many of the things occurring at that at that level have a profound affect on who we experience life. Illness, for instance, always begins at a cellular of microbial level.
We have had microscopes since the sixteenth century, and now can magnify things down to the level of their electrons. But what we have needed is a digital microscope camera, not only to record permanently the changes taking place among cells, but to make that recorded data available for others to study and analyze in depths never before possible.
No more having to keep fragile glass slides of ancient preserved specimens so that ongoing study of...