The king of microscopes comes to us from our friends on
Ebay. This is a JEOL T-300 and was used daily at Owens Corning
until a few years ago when it was replaced. It can magnify
up to 200,000x but realistically the image on these older
machines gets pretty fuzzy after 50k.
Besides just magnifying images, this system has a Kevex
x-ray analysis probe. X-rays are emitted from the specimen
due to the electron bombardment. The x-ray wavelength is
characteristic of the element that produces it. An added
bonus is that the beam can be controlled in a step wise
manner to create a map of the elements across the specimen.
Update: 5-2006
Well of course if you have one electron
microscope then two would be better! Because I just want
more stress in my life, I went out and bought a very high
performance JEOL 6300F as military surplus. The deal was
too good to pass up BUT they beat it with a hammer before
releasing it for sale. Incredibly they missed all the important
stuff and I believe I can get it working. This instrument
has 1.5 nanometer resolution which is about 50 times better
than the first SEM. Stay tuned for pics.

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This is a pore on a beetle wing.
It's a little bigger than two blood cells. 5000x
Dandelion
pollen 1500x

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Framboids in fossil bone at 7500x.
Very
strange "something' about the size of two blood cells.
One of the coolest things you can
do with an x-ray spectroscopy system (EDX) is map the location
of specific elements in color. Shown here is a piece of
fossil bone, red is iron and green is calcium.


