Monday 21 October 2013

The Shape of a Cell

Each term I make a research comic for the Oxford University Biochemical Society magazine called PhenotypeThe topic for this cartoon; the function of cell shape in bacteria. You might not know, but bacteria can have one of a huge variety of different shapes, but why cells have a particular shape is not a commonly asked question. To quote Kevin Young: "To be brutally honest, few people care that bacteria have different shapes. Which is a shame, because the bacteria seem to care very much.".

Check out the comic here, the whole issue will be available to download for free from here soon.



Software used:
Autodesk Sketchbook Pro: Drawing the cells.
Inkscape: Page layout.

Tuesday 15 October 2013

Building a Human

Every single cell in your body is made up of four main types of chemical compound: protein, carbohydrate, lipids/fats and nucleic acids. You are made of molecules, precisely defined and complex molecules, but still just molecules.

The difference in scale between a person and a molecule is enormous. A person is around one to two metres tall. A typical chemical bond is around one to two ångstroms. One ångstrom is tiny; one ten-billionth of a meter. If you took the entire population of the Earth, scaled each person to the size of a typical atomic bond and then stacked everyone head to toe, then the stack would be about your height. This means that, while you are made of molecules, it takes a lot of them to make a person!

The most common type of complex biological molecule in your body are proteins. These are the molecular machines that run your cells. Proteins are made up of chains of different combinations of 21 different amino acids. The amino acids themselves are quite simple molecules; typically made up of 5-10 carbon atoms, a couple of nitrogen and oxygen atoms and a sprinkling of hydrogen. We now know enough about protein amino acid sequences, the structure of cells and the structure of proteins that we could make a pretty good effort of making a scale model of a person, or at least the proteins that make them up.


This picture is a plastic scale model of 100 amino acids, representative of all the amino acids in your body, at about the ratio the different types are used to make up the proteins in your cells. They are ready to clip together to make a scale model of proteins, at a scale of about one centimetre for a bond (100 million times larger than the molecules they represent). Using enough copies of this (and lots of plastic models of water molecules) you could make an accurate scale model of 75% of your body. You would need a lot though; 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 copies of this set of 100 amino acids. The scale model of your body would also stand around 100,000 kilometres tall (1/3 of the way to the moon), and would weigh much more than the entire Earth.

Your body is an incredible molecular machine, made up of a near-unimaginable mixture of complex biological molecules, all running at a molecular scale. Next time you see someone talking about nanotechnology stop and think for a second. You are nanotechnology; a self-organising, self-repairing, reproducing, thinking piece of nanotech.

Software used:
Blender: 3D design of the plastic scale model.

Friday 11 October 2013

Making Big Things Look Small

Any photo normally give you an immediate sense of scale, but what is it about the picture that let's you know how big something is? Take a look at these two photos:


The first photo is clearly of some tiny water droplets on a plant, while the one on the right is clearly of a train running through a city. It isn't just content (train vs. droplet) and context (city vs. leaf) that inform you about the scale; you can trick you eyes into thinking a massive building is actually a miniature. There are other properties of the image that come into play.

The key is blur. In photos of tiny objects the background and foreground of the image are normally very blurred, but with big objects the background and foreground are normally sharply in focus. I talked about this effect in my last blog post; the bigger the ratio of the size of the lens to the distance to the object, then the more blurred the background and foreground look. Microscopes take this to the extreme, when out of focus parts of the image are so blurred that you can't see what is there at all.

This effect is universal, it even happens with your eyes. You can try it out: hold your finger close to your face (about 15cm/6in away) and look at it with one eye closed. Notice how blurred things in the background look. Now hold out your hand at arms length, and look at it with one eye closed. Now the objects in the background look more sharply in focus.

So to make something big looks small you need to make the foreground and background look blurred. Simple! Before digital image processing (Photoshop) effects like this had to be done in camera. It was surprisingly easy; take a camera with a detachable lens, and detach the lens from the camera. If you now set up the lens pointing at something you want to take a photo of, but tilt the camera relative to the lens, then you get an effect which is a bit like blurring the foreground and background of the image. This happens because one side of the image sensor/film is now a bit too close to the lens. This makes that side of the camera long sighted, and that side of the image blurry. The other side of the image sensor/film is also at the wrong distance from the lens, but is a bit too far instead of a bit too close. This makes the other side of the camera a bit short sighted, and makes that side of the image blurry too. The middle of the image sensor/film is still at the correct distance from the lens though, so the middle of the image is still in focus.

In principle this is simple, but in practice detaching the lens from your camera just means lots of stray light can sneak into the photo making glare. In practice you need to use a special lens which can be tilted while still attached to the camera, called a tilt shift lens. These are very specialised and cost a huge amount; it is much cheaper to fake the effect using a computer! There are many pieces of software that let you imitate tilt shift lenses, all that is needed is a gradually increasing blur as you move away from the line across the image that you want to remain in focus. I actually wrote a filter in ImageJ which does this processing. It is amazing how much this simple effect can trick your eye; it makes big things looks small by imitating the limitations of focal depth when using lenses to make an image.

This is the same photo as above, but with a tilt shift effect applied to it. This chunk of London now looks like a miniature, with a tiny toy train running through it.

The Tower of London, looking a lot smaller than usual!

The reverse effect happens too, though is psychologically less strong. This is part of the reason scanning electron microscope images are so compelling; they don't use light or lenses (at least in a conventional sense) to generate the image. This lets everything, from background to foreground, be sharply focused. It makes the microscopic world feel free big and accessible.

This diatom shell is less than a 0.1mm wide, but the sharpness of the foreground and background make it feel larger.

Artificially blurring the foreground and background makes it seem much smaller.

When communicating science it is important to think about the scale things appear; scanning electron microscope images break your intuitive concept of scale, and it is hard to imagine just how small the sample is. The image below, by Donald Bliss and Sriram Subramaniam and awarded Honorable Mention in the National Geographic best science images of 2008, is of the structures inside a single cell, and is a perfect example of why you need to think about scale. This image is a computational reconstruction, so it could be presented with pin sharp focus, but by blurring the background it conveys the sense of scale extremely well. It feels like a single cell.


Software used:
Photomatix Pro: Generating the tonemapped HDR photos.
UFRaw: Camera raw file conversion.
ImageJ: Custom tilt shift filtering.

Tuesday 16 July 2013

Micro 3D Scanning - 1 Focal Depth

3D scanning is a very powerful tool, and it's value isn't limited to the objects and scenes you interact with in everyday life. The ability to precisely determine the 3D shape of tiny (even microscopic) objects can also be really useful.

 The 3D reconstructed shape of a tiny (0.8 by 0.3 mm) surface mount resistor on a printed circuit board. This was made using only a microscope; no fancy laser scanning required!

3D scanning through a microscope is a bit different to normal 3D scanning; mostly because when you look down a microscope at an object it looks very different to what you might expect from day-to-day life. The most immediately obvious effect is that out of focus areas are very out of focus, often to the point where you can barely see what is there. This effect comes down to the angle over which light is collected by the lens capturing the image; your eye or a camera lens in everyday life, or an objective lens when using a microscope.

Three images of the surface mount resistor. The three pictures are taken at different focus distances so different parts of the image are clear and others blurred. The blurred parts are very blurred!

In every-day-life when using a camera or your eyes distance from the lens to the object is normally long, it may be several metres or more. As a result the camera/your eye only collects light over a small of angle, often less than one degree. In comparison microscopes collect light from an extremely large range of angles, often up to 45 degrees. The angle must be this large because the objective lens sits so close to the sample. A wider angle of light collection makes out of focus objects appear more blurred. In photography terms the angle of light collection is related to the f-number, and large f-numbers (which have a large angle of light collection) famously have very blurred out of focus portions of the image.

The upshot of this is that in a microscope image the in focus parts of an image are those which lie very near (often within a few micrometers) to the focal plane. It is quite easy to automatically detect in focus parts of an image by using local image contrast (this is actually how autofocus works in many cameras) to map which parts of a microscope image are perfectly in focus.

In this series of images the most in-focus one is image 6 because it has the highest local contrast...

 ... using edge detection to emphasise local contrast in the image really highlights which one is perfectly in focus.

In this series of images the most in-focus one is image 55 instead.

The trick for focus 3D scanning down a microscope is taking the ability to detect which parts of an image are in focus, and using this to reconstruct the 3D shape of the sample. Going to the 3D scan is actually really easy:
  1. Capture a series of images with the focus set to different distances.
  2. Map which parts of each of these images are perfectly in focus.
  3. Translate this back to the focus distance used to capture the image.
This concept is very simple; if you know one part of an object is perfectly in focus when the focus distance is set to 1mm, that means it is positioned exactly 1mm from the lens. If a different part is perfectly in focus when the focus distance is 2mm, then it must be positioned 2mm from the lens. Simple!

It may be a simple idea, but this method gives a high quality 3D reconstruction of the object.

The reconstructed 3D shape of the resistor, using 60 images focused 0.01mm apart, mapped to a depth map image. The lighter bits stick out more from the surface, and the darker bits stick out less.


Using the depth map to reconstruct the resistor reconstructed in full colour in 3D! Pretty cool for something less than 1 mm long...

Does that seem impressive? Then check out the videos:


A video of the original focus series of images captured of the resistor.



The reconstructed 3D shape.



A 3D view of the resistor, fully textured.


This approach is, roughly speaking, how most 3D light microscopy is done in biological and medical research. It is very common practice to capture a focal series like this (often called a "z stack") to get this 3D information from the sample. 3D imaging is most useful in very thick samples where you want to be able to analyse the structure in all three dimensions, an example might be analysing the structure of a tumour. My research on Leishmania parasites inside white blood cells uses this approach a lot too. The scanning confocal fluorescence microscope was actually designed to maximise the value of this 3D effect by not only blurring out of focus parts of the image, but also eliminating the light all together by blocking it from reaching the camera.

Software used:
ImageJ: Image analysis.
Blender: 3D viewing and rendering.

Marista - my second professional font!

It has been over a year since I released my last font. This new one, Marista, has actually been sat on my hard disk for over 9 months so it is about time it saw the light of day! You can take a look at the interactive previews here: http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/zephyris/marista/


Marista is a bit of an unusual design. It is a monospaced font meaning every symbol is equal in width (like found on a typewriter; Courier is the classic example) but unlike most monospaced fonts it is designed to be a stylistic cursive script, within the constraints of the even letter width. It is actually based on a real and popular typewriter font used in the 1960s-70s, and I designed it to try and capture some of the light irregularities which characterise real typewritten fonts rather than their computer equivalents. The name itself is a derived from Maritsa, the name of the major Bulgarian typewriter company; it was a Maritsa typewriter sample which first introduced me to this text style.





It is a very distinctive, yet readable, font and I designed it with the intention to be used in a block of text. Both normal and italic variants are available, though the original typewriter fonts are more similar to the italic. At very large scales the subtle irregularities which make it look authentically typewritten can look awkward, but in a block of text this slight irregularity really captures the typewritten feeling. Try writing your next letter or invitation in it!

Software used:
Inkscape: Outline design
FontForge: Glyph coding and font generation

Wednesday 3 July 2013

Cell Biology of Infectious Pathogens - Ghana 2013

For the last four years there has been a cell biology workshop in West Africa, organised by Dick McIntosh, an intense two week course aiming to help young African scientists around the master's degree stage of their careers. This course ran again this year, and was the first organised by Kirk Deitsch (malaria expert and a regular from the previous courses) and I was fortunate enough to be invited to teach the trypanosome half of the course. For its fifth incarnation the course returned to a location where it has previously been held, the Department of Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology in the University of Ghana, and was organised with Gordon Awandare.


The focus this year was teaching basic cell biology and the associated lab techniques, emphasising how this helps understand and fight some of the major parasitic diseases in Africa: African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness), leishmaniasis and malaria. All three of these diseases impact Ghana and the surrounding countries and these diseases are of enormous interest to students embarking on a scientific career in Africa.


Of the three diseases we were teaching about malaria is by far the most well known, both locally and internationally. It is caused by Plasmodium parasites (which are single cell organisms) which force themselves inside the red cells in the blood to hide from the host immune system. Malaria is often viewed as the iconic neglected tropical disease, however in the last 10 years or so the understanding of the disease and efforts to find a vaccine and new drugs has improved vastly. Unfortunately it is still very common (we had one case in the participants on the course in the two weeks), drug resistance is rising, and it places a huge cost and health burden on the affected countries. It also impacts a huge area; almost all of sub-Saharan Africa is at risk.

Looking at Leishmania. One of the lab practicals was making light microscopy samples from non-human infective Leishmania using Giemsa stain.

Leishmaniasis and trypanosomiasis are caused by two related groups of parasites, Leishmania and trypanosomes (also single cell organisms), and if malaria is a neglected tropical disease the these are severely neglected tropical diseases. The two parasites live in different areas in the host, trypanosomes swim in the blood while Leishmania live inside macrophages, a type of white blood cell that should normally eat and kill parasites. In comparison to malaria fewer drugs are available, the drugs are less effective and several have severe side effects. Even diagnosis is thought to often be inaccurate. The impact of these diseases is less than malaria; human trypanosomiasis is thought to be relatively rate and leishmaniasis is confined to a semi-desert band just to the south of the Sahara. Trypanosomiasis does have a huge economic impact though, as it infects cattle and prevents milk and meat production, and cases of leishmaniasis are probably under-reported.

Staining trypanosomes. One practical was making immunofluorescence samples. In this sample the flagellum of trypanosomes was stained fluorescent green using the antibody L8C4.

So what did we teach?

The teaching was a mixture of lectures, small group discussions, lab practicals and lab demonstrations and we taught for 14 hours a day for 11 days; we could cover a lot of material! All the teaching was focused on linking basic cell biology to parasites and to practical lab techniques. Topics taught included how parasites avoid the host immune system, molecular tools to determine parasite species, light microscopy techniques, using yeast as tool to analyse cell biology of proteins from other species, host cell interaction of parasites, and many more.

Detecting human-infective trypanosomes. This gel of PCR products shows whether the template DNA was from a human-infective or non-human infective subspecies of T. brucei. If there was a DNA product of the correct size (glowing green) then the sample was human-infective.

A great example of how all the teaching tied together was polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to determine species. Human-infective trypanosomes have a single extra gene which lets them resist an innate immune factor in human blood which would otherwise kill them, and I taught about why this is important for understanding the disease and how it was discovered. This gene can be detected by PCR, and this technique is used to tell if a particular trypanosome sample could infect people. We ran a practical actually doing this in the lab.

PCR is a simple, adaptable and easy technique for checking any parasite for a particular species-defining or drug resistance gene, and we also taught how to use online genome sequence data to design PCR assays. We even worked through PCR assay design for many individual participant's personal research projects, really transferring the skills we were teaching to their current research. Finally we looked at papers using PCR techniques to critically analyse the experiment and assay design to help people avoid pitfalls in their own work.

This was a great demonstration of how basic cell biology and lab techniques can have real practical application with medical samples and help with surveillance of a disease. We designed all of the teaching to have this kind of practical application.


7x speed timelapse video of fish melanophores responding to adrenaline.

One practical with massive visual impact was the response of fish melanophores to adrenaline/epinephrine. Fish normally use these cells to change colour in response to stimuli and melanin particles (melanosomes) inside specialised cells (melanophores) run along the microtubules which make up a large portion of the cell cytoskeleton. We used it to demonstrate signalling; adrenaline can be used to stimulate movement of the melanosomes towards the centrosome.

This is really flexible experimental system for demonstrating the functions of the cytoskeleton, motor proteins and signalling pathways because the output (movement of the pigment particles) is so easy to observe with a cheap microscope or even a magnifying glass. This experiment was particularly chosen as it is a useful and accessible teaching tool for cell and molecular biology, and many of the course participants had teaching obligation in addition to their research.


Western blots in Western Africa. 100x timelapse of loading and running a SDS-PAGE gel.

We aimed to cover all the major molecular and cell biology techniques and had practicals doing microscopy, immunofluorescence, growing a microorganism (in this case yeast), PCR, agarose gel electrophoresis SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. The yeast practicals were particularly cool; using genetically modified cell lines the students analysed the function of p53, a transcription factor with a major role in recognising genetic damage and avoiding cancer, and how well it promotes transcription from different promoter sequences. These practicals taught growing yeast, temperature sensitive mutants, several types of reporter proteins in yeast and Western blotting, all concerning a transcription factor with huge clinical relevance in cancer!

Exploring DNA and protein structures through PyMol in a bioinformatics session.

Practicals weren't just limited to lab practicals though. We also ran interactive bioinformatics sessions looking at the kinds of data which are freely available in genome and protein structure databases online. These were also very popular, especially as so much data is available for free online.

All in all the course was a great success. The participants were all extremely enthusiastic, hard working and scarily smart! Feedback so far has also been very positive. I feel that courses like this can have a huge impact on the careers of young African scientists, and I sincerely hope that funding can be secured to continue running this type of course in the future.

You can also read more about this course at the ASCB website.

Software used:
ImageJ: Image processing and timelapse video creation.
Tasker for Android: Timelapse video capture.
Pymol: Protein structure analysis

Tuesday 25 June 2013

Need to teach PCR?

Need some high quality diagrams to explain polymerase chain reaction (PCR), designing primers, or some combo of both? You have come to the right place! There seemed to be a complete lack of high quality diagrams of primer sequences and the PCR cycle, so I drew some.


The primers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Primers_RevComp.svg



 Melting the template DNA. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Primers_RevComp_Melted2.svg


Annealing of the primers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Primers_RevComp_Annealed2.svg


Elongation by DNA polymerase from the primers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Primers_RevComp_Elongation2.svg

These diagrams are all in scalable vector graphics (SVG) format and free for others to use and edit. Inkscape is a great, free, SVG editor, feel free to grab it and modify these images to your heart's content!

Software used:
Inkscape: Vector graphics

Thursday 20 June 2013

Sitting in a Pinhole Camera

Pinhole cameras are the simplest camera possible, made up of only a pinhole and a screen or film. They don't even need a lens. The camera works by line of sight and the fact that light essentially always travels in straight lines. For every point on the film there is a single line of sight, out through the pinhole, to a point in the world outside the camera. Only light from that point in the outside world can get through the pinhole and hit the film, which is the way in which the image is made. This simplicity means that you can make a pinhole camera incredibly easily. All that is needed is:
  1. A dark container or enclosure. 
  2. A small circular hole in one side of the container. 
  3. A screen or film to detect the light. 
The first two of these are easy to make at home, but the third isn't. Who has a spare piece of film and developing solutions? The [other] solution? Use a person to detect the light and see the image directly, or sketch it on the screen. The problem with people is they are pretty big, you can't squeeze one into a shoebox. Let's make a bigger pinhole camera then, one the size of a room. A room-sized container is easy to find, it's called a room!


A room sized pinhole camera!

The ability of a pinhole to project an image of a scene has been known for over 1000 years, and was first clearly described by the Persian philosopher Alhazen. These ancient scientists faced the same problem detecting light and initially used darkened rooms or tents with a pinhole in one side, then traced the image projected by the pinhole by hand. These devices are called camera obscura, the Latin literally meaning darkened room!

Turning a room into a pinhole camera takes just three easy steps:

1. The dark enclosure 
A pinhole camera container has to be light proof to prevent light leaking in and spoiling the image. The best thing for light proofing a room is aluminium foil which is very opaque for its weight and thickness. Foil tape is also excellent for blocking smaller gaps. 

2. The pinhole
There are a few rules for pinhole size; the bigger it is, the brighter the image. There is simply a larger gap for the light to get in. Unfortunately larger pinholes give a more blurred image because it increases the range of angles at which light can pass through the pinhole and hit a particular point on the film or screen. The pinhole also can't be too small else diffraction of light will start blurring the image. Practically for a room a "pinhole" around 1.5-2.0 cm in diameter will let in enough light to see the image clearly, but be small enough to give quite a sharp image.

3. The screen or film
In a room-sized pinhole camera you just need to sit in the room to see the image!

Foil blocked windows and a pinhole, the shaft of light is from the sun.

The image in a pinhole camera is inverted (upside down). This is because for light to reach the top of the film after travelling through the pinhole it has to be travelling at an upward angle; the line of sight through the pinhole means this is a view of the ground. Similarly for the light to reach the bottom of the film after travelling through the pinhole it has to be travelling at a downward angle, in this case giving a view of the sky. The upshot of this is that in a room sized pinhole camera the floor is a sea of clouds with an inverted picture of the world outside projected on the wall.


The pinhole image the right way up...

... and upside down. The same way up as the image.


You can literally sit in the clouds!


Software used:
UFRaw: Raw to jpg conversion of the raw camera files.

Friday 7 June 2013

Pretty Rubbish

Mikumi Zebra, through a polythene bag (and no, it's not photoshopped!).

Rubbish isn't normally viewed as pretty. A huge proportion of modern waste is plastic, and it is only recently that biodegradable plastics have become common, leaving a world filled with plastic waste. Plastic bags line trees, beaches are swamped with bottles. There is even a country sized patch of fragmented plastic waste floating in the middle of the Pacific ocean. Rubbish is not normally viewed as pretty because it simply isn't.

Coke Exhibit, through an Evian bottle.

Our eyes are pretty rubbish. They can only see light in a narrow range of wavelengths/frequencies (if our hearing was like or vision we would only be able to hear one octave) and can only detect wavelength and intensity. We just can't see other properties of the light, which includes phase and polarisation. Polarised light is all around us; if you have ever tried to look at an LCD screen while wearing polarising sunglasses or 3D glasses from the cinema you will have seen wierd effects. These happen purely because of the  polarisation of the light.

Oxford Narrowboats, through a ziplock bag.

Polarisation can make rubbish pretty. Plastics are made of long linear polymers and when plastic is stretched or stressed these line up and start interacting differently with light whose waves are traveling at different orientations. As polarised light is light whose waves travel at only one orientation this means it interacts strangely with plastics. Because our eyes can't see polarisation we don't normally notice this, but using tricks with polarised light to look at plastic we can reveal these effects. This can transform the appearance of rubbish.

Riverside Path, through a magazine wrapper.

Sadly pretty rubbish is a big PR statement. The spread of plastic waste is destroying pretty parts of the world, not just in appearance but though damage to ecosystems. The tragic case is that in the future the beauty of nature may be lost, preserved only through artificial images in artificial materials like plastics. Now that would be pretty rubbish.

 Iffley, through a tonic bottle.

You can explore the full set on Flickr.

Software used:
UFRaw: Raw to JPEG conversion.

None of these images are photoshopped in any way, they are 100% photo and could have been capture on a film camera. 

Thursday 6 June 2013

Laser Scanning a Room

Laser scanners are an amazing piece of tech which power everything from modern surveying to the self driving cars Google is developing. The way they work is surprisingly simple, they are actually just echo location, but using light.
  1. Point the laser at an object
  2. Send a pulse of laser light
  3. Measure the time the light takes to bounce back to the scanner
  4. Point at a new object and repeat
Most scan the whole of environment instead if just measuring the distance to single objects, and use a rotating scanner with a spinning mirror. 

So why don't the Google cars drive around dazzling people with lasers? Simple; they use infrared lasers instead. Near infrared has a wavelength of around 800nm and behaves just like the light we are used to. Imagine night vision not thermal vision. It is already common to use near infrared for communication using light that doesn't dazzle people, TV remote controls and mobile phone infra red ports use near infra red. 

This means, if Google's forecasts on the success of their self driving cars are to be believed, that in a few years time there will be a hidden world of laser scanning in action. Every time a Google self driving car goes past you will be scanned with infra red light. So what would that hidden world look like? 

I don't have a laser scanner, but I do have an infra red laser, an arm to wave it about with, an infra red camera, and perseverance. So let's fake a laser scan! 


This is what a room looks like when being scanned by a laser scanner (or at least a slightly wonky human imitation of one). Its not what a laser scanner sees, but what you could see if you could see in infra red and watched one in action. Pretty cool really. You can see the path the laser moves over as it scans, and the "shadow" of the scanner (ie. me!). You can just about make out the shape of the room, a coffee table and a sofa, by the way the path of the laser is distorted (some cheaper laser scanners actually measure this distortion to do the scan). 

So what about if there were multiple laser scanners in action together? Because they only look at a single point at any one time they wouldn't interfere with each other (unless they happened to try and scan the exact same point at the exact same time) so could all be on and working simultaneously. So here are two more fake scanning in action:





If these three scans were just piled on top of each other that would be pretty confusing to look at, so let's imagine that they use slightly different wavelengths (equivalent to colours) of light instead. 




This is the amazing result of having three (faked) and laser scanners in action at once. Pretty cool really. Even more scans starts to get messy, but the shape of the room really stands out. This is six scans combined with different colours for each.


Now imagine the future, a future where the infra red part of the spectrum starts getting busy as technology takes advantage of it. Picture a visible light photo of five self driving cars driving past a landmark. Basically just an advert for Google. Now picture the same thing, but in infra red. Now that could be a work of art.

For more images like this check out my Flickr set.

Geeky notes:
Laser scanners obviously aren't the only thing that lights up the near infra red part of the spectrum. The sun pumps out near infra red light which would swamp the scene with light, these photos will probably work better at night. Incandescent lights (ie. lights which aren't fluorescent, LED or energy saving), and anything else which is extremely hot (think flames and anything which glows red hot or hotter), also pump out infra red light. Fortunately as LED and fluorescent lights get more common the night time near infra red scene will get darker making the laser scanning pictures even more striking. On this topic this is why energy saving bulbs save energy, by producing less light at wavelengths that we can't see. 

Software used:
ImageJ: Photo handling and tweaking, composite image making.

Thursday 9 May 2013

3D Lightning

Reddit is a great website, where the ability to share and discuss things on the web gives some great little discoveries. Things that would otherwise seem impossibly unlikely, like two people in completely different places getting a photo of the same lightning bolt, suddenly pop up all the time.

 Pic by chordnine

 Pic by Bobo1010

Having two pictures of the exact same lightning bolt lets you do something pretty amazing; reconstruct its path in 3D. In this case because the precise location and elevation of the photographers isn't known this is slightly more art than science, but it is still fun!

These are the two bolts, scaled to approximately the same size:


It is immediately clear that they are taken from about the same direction but different heights: the second bolt looks squashed vertically. This means the pair of images are roughly a stereo pair, but with a vertical shift instead of a horizontal. This is just like the pair of images you would see with your eyes if you had two eyes positioned vertically instead of horizontally on your head.


To analyse this the first step is to trace the lightning bolt, making sure that every point in one image matches up to the corresponding point in the other image, then record the coordinates of all the points. This gives a nice table of numbers where you can calculate the difference in x and y position in the two images.


Now we need to do some maths... except I don't like doing complicated maths and it turns out there is a big simplification you can make! If both pictures are taken from a long way away from the lightning bolt (i.e. the object has quite a small angular size in the image) then the shift in position between the images is proportional to the distance from the camera. Bigger shifts mean that bit of the bolt is closer to the camera. This approximation is pretty accurate for the majority of cameras, so I used it here.

The other problem is the proportionality factor. If one part of the lightning bolt shifts twice as much between the two images as another part that means it is twice as close. But twice as close as what? Without knowing exactly where the cameras were positioned that means only the relative distance, not absolute distance, can be calculated. Oh well, close enough!

So what does the lightning bolt look like in 3D? I plugged the coordinates into Blender and this is the result:


Pretty amazing really!

Software used:
ImageJ: Image analysis.
Blender: 3D modelling and rendering.