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Analysis of trace materials most often begins with a visual examination of the evidence usually involving macrophotography.
They also solved the RF camera's parallax error problem in macrophotography.
The 45 mm and 85 mm "Micro" lenses offer close focus (0.5 magnification) for macrophotography.
When a polished flat sample reveals traces of its microstructure, it is normal to capture the image using macrophotography.
This system was especially valuable in photomacrography (macrophotography) and photomicrography (microphotography).
These images were compiled in a 1979 book, "A Mysterious Presence: Macrophotography of Plants."
A variation of macrophotography involves using the scanner to produce stereoscopic or "3D" images of small objects.
Many manufacturers also offer monorail extensions that move the front or rear standards farther away from each other to facilitate focusing on close objects (macrophotography).
In the 1970's, Ms. Bubley embarked on a very different photographic project: macrophotography of plants.
Fractured products can be examined using fractography, an especially useful method for all broken components using macrophotography and optical microscopy.
High resolution macrophotography, infrared reflectography and X-radiography of the Ghent Altarpiece.
Ant Hill Wood features some macrophotography of a captive C. vagus colony in France.
Stereomicroscopy overlaps macrophotography for recording and examining solid samples with complex surface topography, where a three-dimensional view is essential for analysing the detail.
Optical microscopy or macrophotography are often enough to pinpoint the nature of the failure and the causes of crack initiation and growth if the loading pattern is known.
One feature unique to the OM1 compared to the rest of the OM system was its manual mirror lock-up making it ideal for astrophotography and macrophotography.
Examples of forensic macrophotography accompany her talk at 4 p.m. at the Museum of Long Island Natural Sciences on the Stony Brook campus of the State University (631) 632-8230.
Strictly speaking, macrophotography is technical photography with actual image size ranging from near life-size (1:1 image-to-object ratio) to about ten or twenty times life-size (10 or 20:1 ratio, at which photomicrography begins).
Inspired by German romanticism, he infuses nature and science with the supernatural, balancing lurid special effects with a realistic view of disease-bearing rats and clinical macrophotography of predatory spiders and a Venus flytrap.
Now he is involved with all things photographic including deep-sky imaging, macrophotography, microphotography, pin-hole camera photography and high-speed flash photography [2] he is the designer and developer of revolutionary new ultra-high speed Xenon flash equipment.
Slow motion macrophotography video (50% timelag, looping, each image shifted to compensate the rolling microturbulences from the waves) of feeding juvenile herring (38 mm) on copepods - the fish approach from below and catch each copepod individually.
Whereas they include no butterflies, micros do also include a surprising number of day-flying groups, and the advent of online identification resources in many countries (e.g. "UK moths"[1]) combined with the widespread use of digital macrophotography, is making them much easier to identify.
Macro photography (or photomacrography or macrography, and sometimes macrophotography) is extreme close-up photography, usually of very small subjects, in which the size of the subject in the photograph is greater than life size (though macrophotography technically refers to the art of making very large photographs).