Guess My Gunk Valerie Goss
Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
The mineral salt has a cubic crystal shape The mineral salt has a cubic crystal shape. This grain of kosher salt is composed of many cubes stuck together. With its large surface area, it can absorb more moisture than a similar sized cubic salt crystal. This makes it ideal for curing meats, which involves absorbing blood from the raw meat. X 75 Hypodermic needles must be sharp in order to pass through the skin easily. Looking down the barrel of this tiny needle shows it is not as smooth as it first appears. X150 At a glance, this stuff appears to stick as if by magic. However, magnified 35 times, it is easy to see where the stick comes from. One side contains the hooks (left side), the other has the loops that catch on the hooks. X 35 Common everyday items take on a new dimension at high magnification. In this photo, a staple is seen where it ripped through the fibers of a yellow sticky note paper. X 35 Tokay gecko's front toe. Tokay geckos can adhere to a variety of surfaces by using a unique pad composed of millions of tiny hairs, each smaller than the wavelength of visible light! These tiny hairs each have a tiny attraction (van der Waals force) to a surface when in extremely close contact. The combined sum of these attractions would allows a gecko to support hundreds of times its own weight. Images of the Gecko feet were completed with the help of Kellar Autum, Lewis & Clark College, Portland, Oregon. X 1800 This specimen is a small portion of a foam heat protection tile from one of the space shuttle orbiters. Sample was provided by the NASA Kennedy Space Center. X 225 Ever wondered why kidney stones hurt so much? This SEM sample of a human kidney stone clearly illustrates the crystalline structure of this object and the sharp edges that structure produces. X 450
Ever wondered why kidney stones hurt so much Ever wondered why kidney stones hurt so much? This SEM sample of a human kidney stone clearly illustrates the crystalline structure of this object and the sharp edges that structure produces.
This specimen is a small portion of a foam heat protection tile from one of the space shuttle orbiters. Sample was provided by the NASA Kennedy Space Center.
This high-mag sample shows a small section of sticky pad on the underside of a Tokay gecko's front toe. Tokay geckos can adhere to a variety of surfaces by using a unique pad composed of millions of tiny hairs, each smaller than the wavelength of visible light! These tiny hairs each have a tiny attraction (van der Waals force) to a surface when in extremely close contact. The combined sum of these attractions would allows a gecko to support hundreds of times its own weight. Images of the Gecko feet were completed with the help of Kellar Autum, Lewis & Clark College, Portland, Oregon.
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