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Here’s an oldie but a goodie. [RunnerPack] stumbled upon an article from 2001 about building a stereo microscope from a pair of binoculars and a camera lens. With a ring light attached to the… ...
[A. Cemal Ekin] over on PetaPixel reviewed the Apexel 200X LED Microscope Lens. The relatively inexpensive accessory promises to transform your cell phone camera into a microscope. Of course, lense… ...
Scientists at UCLA have created a lens-free microscope that relies on a silicon chip found in smartphones and digital cameras. You can’t use it to snap a selfie, but it could help scientists ...
That drop is then baked on the slide at 70ºC (158ºF), causing it to harden into a flat disc that will serve as the base of the lens. Another drop of the gel is then placed on that base, and the ...
Well, better than a conventional microscope, as you might expect, since I am writing about their work. But, only by a factor of just over two (~100nm), which, is, in some ways, quite disappointing.
The iMicro Q3p changes all of that. Barely bigger than a contact lens, it’s a fingertip accessory which claims to turn any smartphone into a 1200x microscope – simply by sticking to the camera.
University of Washington. "Lens turns any smartphone into a portable microscope." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 15 April 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2014 / 04 / 140415133830.htm>.
The UH lens is not the first stick-on smartphone microscope lens, with a low-magnification polymer lens known as the "Micro Phone Lens" launching via Kickstarter in 2013.
The team started experimenting with 3D-printed lenses and found it was possible to print quality microscope lenses using a photopolymerizing clear resin on a Mars 3 Pro printer. In developing the ...
Researchers in Australia have invented a new kind of optical lens that could be combined with a smartphone camera to create a microscope for diagnosing skin cancer or identifying agricultural pests.
There's a lens in the pouch — and a hole to indicate where it should go. Once assembled the Foldscope is the size of a bookmark. It's small enough to fit in a pocket and can magnify up to 140 times.
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