The vet will be able to to check the presence of these tiny
insects under the microscope.
They might be pictures of extremely complex devices, perhaps the kind used in scientific experiments, or they could be of fine machine parts or the dissected limbos of
an insect under a microscope.
It's like looking at a scary
insect under a microscope.
Not exact matches
Under the
microscope, the spots appear to be crystals encased in pouches that sit on top of the
insects» salivary glands, says Hanus.
K - 12 science classes collect
insects, send them to entomologists at the University of Illinois, and then analyze them via the Internet
under a scanning electron
microscope, thanks to a unique partnership between the university and several business and government institutions.
Through two - way audio and video, scientists Steve Barlow and Kathy Williams guided the students in examining their
insect specimens
under an electron
microscope.
The high school students collected
insect larvae, daphnia, and snail eggs from local water sources and examined them
under the
microscope, making a total of 230 images.
These
insects can often do a skin scraping, which involves rubbing the skin with a scalpel blade, collecting a sample and looking at it
under the
microscope.
When these
insects are examined
under a
microscope or magnifying glass, the differences between them become readily apparent.
It was also the exhibition that confirmed Richter's status as one of the leading artists in the world, and was described by Storr in his introduction as «long overdue» in the United States.2 In 2003 Richter embarked on a small but substantially sized series of paintings entitled Silicate [CR: 885/1 -4] inspired by an article in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung from 12 March 2003 about the shimmering qualities of certain
insects» bodies.3 The resulting four large paintings are perhaps the most overtly biological of the abstract works in Richter's oeuvre, suggestive of cell formations and genetic sequences seen
under the
microscope.
The circular forms retain ambiguity even as they draw reference to the natural world: the flapping wings of an
insect, a vine of climbing ivy, an organism pulsing
under a
microscope.
When I got it
under the
microscope I realized that these were
insects painted onto the wings.»