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When I told her that I wanted to major in microbiology, my best friend from childhood responded, “Are you sure you want to look in a microscope all day?”
But, as it turned out, a lot of microbiologists don’t use microscopes very often. I was one of them. The reason is because a substantial proportion of modern microbiology research uses the tools of molecular biology, for which microscopes are not needed.
If my microbiology career had required the prolific use of microscopes, however, I would never have been satisfied with those miserable light microscopes and their pathetic 1,000x magnification. No, I would have insisted on going big: Theelectron microscope. These instruments, which can magnify objects 10 million times, produce breathtaking images (like thisand this) and are widely used today in various applications.
publish - May 27, 2016
see more at: http://acsh.org/news/2016/05/27/beautiful-new-images-of-ebola-virus-and-other-pathogens/
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Scanning Electron Microscope - Microbiology & Diagnosis
Supporting documentation for the article above is provided within the link below . . .
Nature - Scientific Reports - The scanning electron microscope in microbiology and diagnosis of infectious disease
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep26516