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  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player.  This needle is designed to play stero recordings.   This needle is designed for mon recordings at 78 RPM. The magnification is 105x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-78rpmNeedleB.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.   This record is designed for 45 RPM.  Magnification is 100x when printed at 10 cm wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo3-C.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.  The spair needle pointing up is a 78 RMP needle - not the different angles.  This record is designed for 45 RPM.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-B.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.  Magnification is 135x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-Needle-130x-B.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.  The spair needle pointing up is a 78 RMP needle - not the different angles.  This record is designed for 45 RPM.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-A.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player.  This needle is designed to play stero recordings.   This needle is designed for mon recordings at 78 RPM. The magnification is 105x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-78rpmNeedleA.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player.  This needle is designed to play stero recordings.   This needle is designed for mon recordings at 78 RPM. The magnification is 55x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-78rpmNeedle2B.jpg
  • A special compression driver speaker is mounted to the left of the glass.  When the speaker is set to the resonance of the glass - vibrations will constructively interfere with each other until the glass breaks.  This demonstration takes a special speaker, a frequency generator, and an amplifier that can drive the speaker at 120 watts.  The action is captured with a high speed flash operating at 1/20,000th of a second. This image is one out of a set of two showing before and during the glass shattering..
    K12HS-glass-break008-cleaned.jpg
  • Vibrating strings on a base electric guitar. When plucked, the string vibrates at a specific frequency, which determines the pitch of the note. The vertical lines on the fretboard of the guitar mark where fingers should be placed to shorten or lengthen the vibrating part of the string. Shortening the string produces a note with a higher pitch, lengthening it lowers the note. The image was collected with a digital camera with a fast rolling shutter.
    K17strings-on-base-7.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player.  This needle is designed to play stero recordings.   The magnification is 92x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-Needle-stereo92x-A.jpg
  • A SEM image of a vinyl 45 RPM stereo record.  The groves record vibrations that are picked up by a needle traveling in the grove.   Magnification is 110x when printed at 10CM wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-100xC.jpg
  • Vibrating strings on a base electric guitar. When plucked, the string vibrates at a specific frequency, which determines the pitch of the note. The vertical lines on the fretboard of the guitar mark where fingers should be placed to shorten or lengthen the vibrating part of the string. Shortening the string produces a note with a higher pitch, lengthening it lowers the note. The image was collected with a digital camera with a fast rolling shutter.
    K17strings-on-base-9.jpg
  • Vibrating strings on a base electric guitar. When plucked, the string vibrates at a specific frequency, which determines the pitch of the note. The vertical lines on the fretboard of the guitar mark where fingers should be placed to shorten or lengthen the vibrating part of the string. Shortening the string produces a note with a higher pitch, lengthening it lowers the note. The image was collected with a digital camera with a fast rolling shutter.
    K17strings-on-base-5.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.  Magnification is 135x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-Needle-130x-A.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.   This record is designed for 45 RPM.  Magnification is 100x when printed at 10 cm wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo3-B.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player in a groove on a record. A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.  This is a stereo record.  The needle in contact with the record is a LP needle, or a long play needle designed for stero use.   This record is designed for 45 RPM.  Magnification is 100x when printed at 10 cm wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo3-A.jpg
  • False color scanning electron microscope image of a vinyl record.  A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.
    K07SEM-record50x-A.jpg
  • A SEM image of a vinyl 45 RPM stereo record.  The groves record vibrations that are picked up by a needle traveling in the grove.   Magnification is 210x when printed at 10CM wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-CU1.jpg
  • Vibrating strings on a base electric guitar. When plucked, the string vibrates at a specific frequency, which determines the pitch of the note. The vertical lines on the fretboard of the guitar mark where fingers should be placed to shorten or lengthen the vibrating part of the string. Shortening the string produces a note with a higher pitch, lengthening it lowers the note. The image was collected with a digital camera with a fast rolling shutter.
    K17strings-on-base-8.jpg
  • A SEM image of a vinyl 45 RPM stereo record.  The groves record vibrations that are picked up by a needle traveling in the grove.   Magnification is 110x when printed at 10CM wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-100xB.jpg
  • A SEM image of a vinyl 45 RPM stereo record.  The groves record vibrations that are picked up by a needle traveling in the grove.   Magnification is 110x when printed at 10CM wide.
    K13SEM-Needle-45stereo-100xA.jpg
  • Needle playing a record. Colored scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the needle (stylus) of a record player.  This needle is designed to play stero recordings.   This needle is designed for mon recordings at 78 RPM. The magnification is 55x when printed 10 cm wide
    K13SEM-78rpmNeedle2A.jpg
  • False color scanning electron microscope image of a vinyl record.  A record is used to store sound. It is produced by a machine with a head which vibrates in time to the sound being recorded. This cuts a groove in the record which varies according to the vibrations. A needle can then reproduce these vibrations as it runs along the groove and these, when amplified, produce the original sound.
    K08SEM-recordA.jpg
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