Dazzling photomicrography revealed in Nikon’s annual contest (VIDEO)

Screenshot from youtube.com video

Screenshot from youtube.com video

Nikon has posted the scary and awesome photomicrography works that won the judges’ hearts at the 2014 Small World in Motion competition. If you too have a flair for the arts, hurry up – there’s still time to submit your 2015 entries before today finishes.

More than 130 entries were submitted this year, depicting the
peculiar inner workings of bacterial life, plotting against us
from a microscope slide. The competition introduced the video
category in 2011, taking it into awesome territory.

The verdicts are in for 2014, with first place going to Dr
Mariana Muzzopappa Jim Swoger of the Institute for Research
in Biomedicine Barcelona and the Center for Genomic Regulation
respectively, who captured the development of a zebrafish’s
lateral line – an organ that reads water movements, a bit like
the inner ear in mammals. The video is at once creepy and full of
grace.

Next up, a time-lapse image of crystals forming inside a drop of
saturated caffeine solution. Shining polarized light on the
evolving formations, Dr Douglas Clark of Paedia Corporation
perfectly captured the 20-minute process in a mere 40-second
stretch. This revealed the marvelous crystalline segments
interacting in compressed space, as they achieved equilibrium
again from a chaotic, liquid state.

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Finally, University of Colorado Professor Dr John Hart captured
the dynamics of evaporation of a thin film of oil on a slide. As
an oceanographer, he has been researching the effects of oil
spills. Here we can see reflected light bouncing off the shifting
colors, a remarkable sight.

Many other sterling examples of photomicrography were submitted,
with the video, compiled by The Atlantic, showing the true
grandeur of microscopic processes in all their glory.

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“The capability to capture and share the movement or
development of a specimen under the microscope clearly represents
one of the greater advancements in the tools available to the
scientific community in recent years – and we are honored to
shine a light on some of the best examples each year,”
Eric
Flem, Communications and CRM manager for Nikon Instruments said.

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Screenshot from youtube.com video

“We are continually amazed that this equipment is involved
not only in doing the cutting edge science, but also enabling us
all to witness it first-hand. As the deadline for this year’s
competition approaches, we hope that these winning videos will
inspire other scientists and science-enthusiasts to share the
beauty and motion they capture under a microscope as well.”

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