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

30 Apr, 2015 07:00 / Updated 9 years ago

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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“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.”