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Welcome to Picture Perfect Chemistry

By Jackie Trischman, Ph.D.

Digital camera

Photography allows us to capture light as fixed images. You have probably seen many photographs in your life in all forms. They may have been print photos, pictures in magazines, or digital photos on a cell phone or tablet.

But have you ever wondered exactly聽丑辞飞听these photos get made? From the earliest days of photography, the answer has been聽chemical reactions聽caused by light. The first photo taken with a camera occurred in France in 1827. For almost 200 years since then, we鈥檝e used cameras, film, and images printed on paper. These tools let us make pictures we can put in albums, picture frames, and galleries.

Today, modern technology called聽颈尘补驳颈苍驳听uses things like sound waves, many types of light, and even streams of聽electrons聽to make images we can鈥檛 see with our eyes alone. These tools make the images we use for medicine, space exploration, research, and other areas.

Through medical聽imaging, we can see inside the human body. Medical X-rays, CT scans, and MRIs allow doctors to look inside our bodies in ways never possible before.

Anna Bertha Ludwig's hand pictured in an X-ray.
Anna Bertha Ludwig's hand was taken by her husband Wilhelm Roentgen.
Courtesy of Wiki Commons

On Earth and in space, observatories use different types of imaging. These inventions help us see deeply into the universe and understand it.

Radar uses radio waves to make images in our skies which air traffic controllers use to track the location of airplanes. Ground-penetrating radar can be used to locate pipes and cables underground. It can also be used to find ancient burial sites and structures.

We can also look at things that are very small, like single聽尘辞濒别肠耻濒别蝉听or atoms, using advanced machines called electron microscopes. We use these special microscopes because atoms and molecules are so small that we can鈥檛 even use X-rays, infrared light, ultraviolet light, sound, or radio waves to see them! These images open doors to new discoveries. In this issue of聽Celebrating Chemistry, you will learn more about how photography and imaging work. It is exciting to think about what we will be able to see in the future, thanks to the creativity of scientists and other creative people.


Jackie Trischman, Ph.D. is Dean of the College of STEM at California State University, San Marcos.