|
| |
THROUGH THE electronic
LOOKING GLASS
(STREIFZUG durch
den MIKROKOSMOS)
AMONG
THE MOST FASCINATING pictures you’ll ever see in 3-D are those produced by
scanning electron microscopes, or "SEMs"! These instruments, which use
electrons rather than light to create images, are capable of magnification and
resolution far beyond that possible with optical (or "light")
microscopes, and the images they produce give you entirely different, amazing,
and often very surprising views of even the most ordinary everyday objects. The
addition of the third dimension to SEM views makes them even more spectacular,
since you can actually see the spatial relationships in the images that you
could only imagine in "flat" 2-D images.
With many years of experience and
a fine artist’s eye, Dee Breger, of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of
Columbia University, has used the SEM (her electronic "looking glass")
to create stereo pairs of a wide variety of subjects, from the most common
household items that you use every day to some very unusual scientific
specimens. We’ve converted these stereo pairs to red/ blue anaglyph images for
this book, and along with each 3-D image, a half-size 2-D duotone image of the
same view is shown so you can compare the two and see for yourself the
difference the third dimension makes! Since most of us know little about these
sophisticated scientific instruments, we’ve also included several pages of
interesting information about optical and electron microscopes, the differences
between them, and how an SEM is used.
In cooperation with Dr. and Mrs.
Wittig of Wittig Books in Germany, the work is published as a dual-language
English and German edition. All introductory information and covers of Through
The Electronic Looking Glass are in English; these same sections in the
German edition, Streifzug Durch Den Mikrokosmos, are in German. Text
accompanying the 3-D and 2-D images in both editions is presented in both
languages. (By the way, all text, both English and German, is written so the
book can be enjoyed by both scientists and non-scientists and by younger readers
and adults alike.)
Here’s a list of the images and
their magnifications in this most unusual work:
1. Barnacle (surface detail), 1000X 11. Lung
Tissue,
150X
21. Dandelion Seeds, 110X
2. Hair,
300X
12. Tick Portrait,
140X
22. Enchanter’s Nightshade Seed, 36X
3. Nylon Stocking,
300X
13. Millipede Portrait,
24X
23. Petrified Wood, 320X
4. Iguana Skin,
24X
14. Planktonic Foraminifer, 200X 24. Table Salt, 260X
5. Velcro,
30X
15. Fossil Radiolaria (2), 400X 25.
Franklin Micromineral, 280X
6. Eggshell,
1300X
16. Fossil Radiolarian (1), 700X 26.
"Petrified" Lightning, 44X
7. Goose Feather,
210X
17. Coccolith. Cluster, 6800X
27. Pyroxene Crystal, 3400X
8. Thyroid Hormones,
10,400X 18. Coccolithophorid,
10,200X 28. Volcanic Ash, 840X
9. Capillary Network,
6200X
19. Pollen Sacs,
100X
29. Worm Tubes, 120X
10. Pancreatic Stone,
50X
20. Pollen Grain,
4600X
30. Burned Tungsten Wire, 1100X
We think you’ll agree that
these are some of the most fascinating 3-D images you’ve ever seen (even in
2-D, SEM images have a life-like quality most microphotographs can’t achieve)!
The 3-D image size is 7x7 inches (17.8x17.8 cm) and faces the page containing
the corresponding duotone and informational English and German text. Each copy
of this 36-page, "Swiss Brochure"-bound (wire binding that lies flat
with a wrap-around cover) 8½X8-inch (22x20 cm) book comes with two extra-large
red/blue Maxi-Viewers. These are a unique handmade anaglyph glass made by
Cygnus Graphic and no longer available elsewhere.
 |
6873 |
Through the Electronic Looking Glass |
$29.95 |
|