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To visualize something this small, we begin with a small block of tissue containing the (even smaller) object. The tissue block is stained and embedded in epoxy. A small portion of the hardened block is shaved into a series of very thin sections, each about 50nm thick and 50 microns across, making a long ribbon of tissue sections.
![]() Ribbons are transferred to specially prepared holders and stained with heavy metals. Then each section, or a portion of each section, is imaged at very high magnification using an electron microscope.
The photographs of each section are digitized, and then realigned into their original positions in the tissue volume using special-purpose computer software. After alignment of sections, the object of interest is then identified within in this volume and a surface is generated by computer to represent its 3D spatial boundary. This 3D surface is available as a VRML object (110K), which can be viewed using a VRML plug-in for your browser. Individual EM section images (50K each) are accessible from the VRML by moving the frame to the desired section plane and clicking on the Get EM Image icon. Each section image is a large bitmap that has been highly compressed using JPEG format. The reconstructed objects are outlined with colored lines.
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| Last Updated: 4/19/02 |