See the Top 20 of the Nikon Small World Microphotography Contest

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Londons – Blood running through the veins, cancer cells forming a heart, a mouse embryo and even the transformation that takes place in the head of a matchstick when it is struck are among the photos awarded in the Nikon Small Word microphotography competition, which announced the winners of its 2023 edition.

The winning photo from this year’s edition shows the nerve head of a rodent’s eye. The colors represent the different nerve structures. The retinal vasculature appears greenish yellow.

Photo: Hassanain Qambari / Nikon Small World

Beauty and complexity of life in the images of the microphotography competition

The contest is considered the most important global microphotography competition. Its objective is to show the beauty and complexity of life through images captured with a microscope, many taken by scientists in their laboratories.

For a few moments, they leave science aside to observe and record what naked eyes cannot see, revealing surprising scenes where least expected – even on a matchstick.

See this year’s best.

The photo of the match came in second place, capturing the sparks that come out as the red head of the match leaves a trail as it is dragged along the friction strip of the matchbox. The microscope allowed us to see the transformations caused in the head of the toothpick by chemical reactions.

Photo: Ole Bielfeldt / Nikon Small World

3rd place in the microphotography competition went to the surprising image of a heart among the cells of a malignant breast tumor.

Photo of breast cancer cells takes third place in microphotography contest
Photo: Malgorzata Lisowska/ Nikon Small World

The microphotograph that took third place shows the skin of a small tarantula. But its enlarged poisonous claws look giant.

Photo of venomous tarantula fangs takes fourth place in microphotography contest
Photo: John-Oliver Dum / Nikon Small World

In fifth place, another photo was chosen that looks like an abstract painting. It shows the auto-fluorescent defensive hairs that cover the surface of the leaves of Eleagnus angustifolia, known as the paradise tree, when exposed to ultraviolet light.

Photo of defensive hairs covering the leaf surface takes fifth place in microphotography competition
Photo: David Maitland / Nikon Small World

The following image preferred by the photo jury shows two specimens of a type of slime mold (comatricha nigra), which grows on decayed wood on the forest floor. They have a long, slender stem, culminating in a sporangium (spherical mass of spores).

Photo of slime fibers takes sixth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Timothy Boomer / Nikon Small World

The sporangium undergoes color transformations as it matures, starting with white, passing through pink, brown, dark brown and finally black. All this in a matter of hours, depending on environmental conditions.

Seventh place went to a close-up of a mouse embryo.

Photo of mouse embryo takes seventh place in microphotography contest
Photo: Grigorii Timin / Nikon Small World

In the macroscopic world, it would look like a flower. But it is the microscopic photo of caffeine crystals, which came in eighth place in the competition.

Photo of caffeine crystals takes eighth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Stefan Eberhard / Nikon Small World

Next came the image of the cytoskeleton of a myoblast in the process of division. The cytoskeleton is the external structure that maintains the shape of cells. Myoblasts are the precursor cells of muscle fibers. The result looks more like a work of art.

Photo of the cytoskeleton of a dividing myoblast takes ninth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Vaibhav Deshmukh / Nikon Small World

Another work of art are the details of motor neurons cultured in a microfluidic environment to separate the cell bodies (in the upper part) from the axons (long filaments of nerve cells), which appear in the lower part. Microphotography won 10th place.

Photo of motor neurons takes tenth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Melinda Beccari / Nikon Small World

They look like sheets of colored paper folded on top of each other. But it is a microphotograph of crystallized sugar syrup, 11th in the jury’s preference.

Photo of crystallized sugar syrup takes eleventh place in microphotography contest
Photo: Diego García / Nikon Small World

12th place is a close-up of a wasp having a meal perched on one of its favorite flowers.

Photo of wasp perched in flower takes twelfth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Sherif Abdallah Ahmed / Nikon Small World

In 13th place was the microphotograph showing the blood passing through the veins, along with the outline of the lymphatic vasculatures captured on the skin of a mouse’s ear.

Photo of veins and lymphatic vasculature in mouse ear skin takes thirteenth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Satu Paavonsalo / Nikon Small World

What looks like a rocket is the tip of an acupuncture needle, an image that came in 14th place. The green structures are sunflower pollen particles.

Photo of sunflower pollen on an acupuncture needle takes fourteenth place in microphotography contest
Photo: John-Oliver Dum / Nikon Small World

15th in the competition was a fluorescent microphotograph of a coral (Acropora sp) showing individual polyps with symbiotic zooxanthellae. The latter are unicellular algae that live inside the coral tissue. It is the photosynthesis carried out by them that provides much of the oxygen that keeps the coral alive. In return, they receive the carbon dioxide they need from the coral.

Photo of coral polyps takes fifteenth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Pichaya Lertvilai / Nikon Small World

The image that came in 16th place looks like a contemporary sculpture. But they are carbon nanotubes. Each nanotube has a hollow, cylindrical structure formed by a single layer of carbon atoms, with a thickness of 1 nanometer, measured 1 million times smaller than 1 millimeter.

Photo of carbon nanotubes takes sixteenth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Diego García / Nikon Small World

In 17th place comes another photo that looks like a painting, made up of scales from the wings of the Chinese moon moth. Found only in China, they live most of their lives as larvae. Her life as an adult is limited to just five days, the period she has to reproduce.

Photo of moth scales takes seventeenth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Yuan Ji / Nikon Small World

The image shows a micrometeorite on the mesh of a number 80 test sieve, which has an opening of 0.125 millimeters. He placed 18th in the competition.

Photo of micrometeorite takes eighteenth place in microphotography competition
Photo: Scott Peterson / Nikon Small World

Another photo that looks more like a painting, showing details of stomata in the epidermis of the peace lily leaf (Spathiphyllum sp).

Photo by we of lily leaf takes nineteenth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Marek Mis / Nikon Small World

20th place went to the detail of the transgenic zebrafish head, showing blood vessels (blue), lymphatic vessels (yellow) and skin and scales (magenta)

Photo of transgenic fish takes twentieth place in microphotography contest
Photo: Daniel Castranova / Nikon Small World

The article is in Portuguese

Tags: Top Nikon Small World Microphotography Contest

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