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Electron microscope images by "eye of science"
 The bulk of the images from the "Microworld of Science" series are by the science photographers Oliver Meckes and Nicole Ottawa. The two specialists for the esthetic representation of scientific themes set up their joint agency "eye of science" in 1994. Microscopy is their key area of photographic expertise. The main tools of the "eye of science" experts are scanning electron microscopy (SEM), light microscopy, a suitably equipped sample preparation lab, and high-performance computers for digital image processing. Almost all the samples are prepared and photographed in the agency's own SEM lab. "eye of science" have earned a number of prestigious awards for their works.

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How the photographs come about: arrangement, technique and image processing
 The first step is to affix the sample to SEM slides using special adhesives and the tiniest of tweezers. If the sample permits, an arrangement is assembled through a stereo magnifying glass. It is then coated with gold or platinum in a vacuum in order to establish electrical conductivity.
To enable photographic light projection in the SEM setup, "eye of science" added another two detectors to the standard set of secondary electron detectors. This greatly enhances the three-dimensional impression of the pictures thus created.
The electron microscopy image reproduces the surface structure of an object in black and white. It does not "see" colors. "eye of science" compensate for this deficit through the use of digital image processing techniques. The photography specialists render the photographed materials in their original colors, accurate to the last pixel.

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