Water flea - Polarized (image added)

Images made through a microscope. All subject types.

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RogelioMoreno
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Water flea - Polarized (image added)

Post by RogelioMoreno »

Here is a set of a specimen that looks like water flea and has some kind of birefrigent.

10x polarized:
Image

Image


20x polarized
Image

Image

Rogelio
Last edited by RogelioMoreno on Thu Jul 05, 2012 3:51 am, edited 2 times in total.

abpho
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Post by abpho »

Tripping. Crazy images. Thanks

Jacek
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Post by Jacek »

:shock: :shock: :shock: wow

Charles Krebs
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Post by Charles Krebs »

Very bizarre!

Looks like it overdosed on vitamin C :wink:

hayath
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Post by hayath »

Crazy colors and details..loved these

arturoag75
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Post by arturoag75 »

...excellent :wink:
arturo

Cactusdave
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Post by Cactusdave »

It does indeed look like something birefringent has crystallized on the surface of this Cladoceran in thin plates. A calcium salt perhaps? Fascinating and attractive. Do you have a DIC or brightfield image that might help with ID and working out what the structure is that's producing the optical effect.
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Litonotus
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Post by Litonotus »

I love #2 and #4 images (:
my FB page

I'm looking for the the extemely rare V-IM magnification changer for the E800 scope. If you have seen a listing or have one for sale please let me know.

RogelioMoreno
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Post by RogelioMoreno »

Thank you all for your comments.

Cactusdave, I only have the polarized version. :(

Marek posted some similar on the following link:

http://www.photomacrography.net/forum/v ... cladoceran

Rogelio

harisA
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Post by harisA »

amazing pictures.

pwnell
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Post by pwnell »

That is remarkable. I will remember to play with the polarizer next time I find a water flea.

Cactusdave
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Post by Cactusdave »

Thanks for the link. My thoughts would be that as water evaporates under the coverslip, salts, probably calcium carbonate, precipitate from solution in the water probably as soluble calcium bicarbonate, in the form of thin transparent birefringent plates. The rough surface of the waterflea carapace would provide suitable crystallization nuclei from which the crystallization process would be initiated.
Leitz Ortholux 1, Zeiss standard, Nikon Diaphot inverted, Canon photographic gear

RogelioMoreno
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Post by RogelioMoreno »

Cactusdave wrote:Thanks for the link. My thoughts would be that as water evaporates under the coverslip, salts, probably calcium carbonate, precipitate from solution in the water probably as soluble calcium bicarbonate, in the form of thin transparent birefringent plates. The rough surface of the waterflea carapace would provide suitable crystallization nuclei from which the crystallization process would be initiated.
Normally I inspect the sample without the coverslip if I find something interesting then I cover it, I remember to have seen the thin birefringent plates on the surface of the waterflea carapace before putting the coverslip.

Thank you for your comments.

Rogelio
Last edited by RogelioMoreno on Mon Jul 02, 2012 12:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.

RogelioMoreno
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Post by RogelioMoreno »

harisA and Waldo,

Thank you for your comments.

Rogelio

discomorphella
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Post by discomorphella »

Thing o' beauty. Are we sure that the birefringent structures are completely external? Could they be some kind of fungal hyphae that have enough of a layered structure to provide sufficient birefringence to generate the effect? I admit they don't look exactly like any fungal structures I've ever seen before, but they do have a sort of "bud-like" or segmented structure. Really unique and beautiful.

David

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