How the pimple looked, gave me chills. Because it really does look like a map of a city. It makes my self think of what we could be, in the full picture. I always try to look for the patterns in nature.
this reminds me of the microscope my mom got me for my birthday when i was little and i would go around collecting all the littlest things to look at them and i'd be entertained for hours, and people say gen z dont have childhoods! haha thank you for bringing back some good memories and making some interesting content! maybe i should try to find that old microscope and re-live the good ol' days (:
Are you a male? If so, put your semen under the microscope and observe your sperm cells swimming around. There are so many of them, and it's so fascinating to see them all swimming around when it looks to the naked eye to simply be a typical drop of liquid!!! Semen is white and thick at first, but it rapidly "dissolves" and becomes a clear liquid that is easy to see through under a scope. It's mind-blowing to look at this seemingly typical droplet of water and then look at how many sperm cells are in there, each one capable of growing an entire human being. What's more, is the fact that those sperm cells can live inside a woman's fallopian tubes for up to 2-3 days swimming around inside of her for that entire time just waiting to bump into a freshly ovulated oocyte. They swim against the flow of mucosal secretions that the fallopian tubes' cilia are constantly pushing back downward toward her uterus. That semen contains sodium bicarbonate and immunosuppressants to neutralize the acidic pH of the vaginal epithelium and decrease the activity of macrophages, APCs, and helper T cells. Interestingly, the volume of ejaculated semen is not what makes a man more or less fertile. The number of sperm cells is what matters, as well as whether they are healthy, properly formed, and effectively motile. A man who only produces 2mL of semen per ejaculation event can be way more fertile than a man who produces 6mL of semen. Why? If the 6mL man has a poor diet, enjoys jacuzzi soaks after work, wears tighty whities and works as a construction worker, and has an irregular sleep schedule with a stressful boss always breathing down his neck, he will have wayyyyy less sperm per mL and many of them will be dead or not moving effectively. In contrast, the 2mL man eats a balanced diet, takes cool showers, works an office job which is not stressful, and he wears loosely fitted boxers. If you looked at the 6mL semen under the scope, you'd see sparse sperm and those that are present would be stationary, swimming lazily, or swimming in circles. The 2mL semen droplet would be packed full of sperm darting all around your frame of view desperately seeking out the chemical ligands that attract them to an active oocyte. The 6mL man may have sex with his female partner 12 hours before ovulation and be perfectly aligned to have successful conception and pregnancy, but his sperm are so weak and sparse that the woman's body wipes them all out before they reach the oocyte. On the other hand, the 2mL man may have sex with his female partner 2 days before ovulation with a condom that accidentally breaks, and she would get pregnant because his semen was so darn packed full of healthy, vital sperm. Some women may be creeped out that their partner's sperm are still swimming around inside them for 2-3 days after making love, but others (like me) find it to be extremely romantic. 😻🤓 Anyway, I'm rambling now. Try it and see. If you are not a male but you have a male partner, get a sample of his semen and look at it instead.
@@mannys9130 haha im a female but i'd totally try that if i was a man, i dont think my boyfriend would be very ammused if i asked to look at his jizz under a microscope because a youtube comment gave me the idea XD
I'm not 100% sure if it's for the same reason but I know that a moths wings are covered in tily hairs that come off fairly easily so that if it's ever stuck on a spider web it can more easily get away and leave only the sacrificial hairs stuck to the web.
7:08 fun fact: along with moths, butterflies are actually part of the order Lepidoptera, and the name comes from greek "lepis" (scale) and "ptera" (wings), so their scientific name means "scaly-wings"
Someone’s should do a before and after video of someone’s hair under a microscope that’s hasn’t washed their hair in two and a half weeks vs someone’s who just used shampoo vs shampoo and conditioner. I’d love to see how they all look different from one another. Also a before and after of someone’s end of a hair who hasn’t had a haircut in six months vs a hair that has just been cut with scissors.
Ok I can’t imagine people complaining but yep. I love that your giving us a view of things. I don’t have a microscope so I quite enjoying what you do. Thanks
It’s not a pimple.. he most likely got the pus from somewhere else on his body and put it on his finger.. it’s impossible to get a pimple/zit on your fingertip..
Such vast and interesting content subjects you've come up with. Even the work that goes into each video from concept right through to editing as well as production value is pretty amazing. You're talented.
I was literally thinking wow how beautiful is that blackhead it would make a great screen saver and then you made it one. I burst out laughing, so cute. Life is so beautiful! Imagine God knows each scale on that moth, every hair on our heads. Amazing ❤
Love your videos man. It's always interesting to magnify anything that out of the ordinary. That's how real science is all about. Forget and ignore those other childish comments. Keep doing what you do. Thanks again for the videos. You got me as a new subscriber. 🙏
Located in Canada here, I have been having a hard time figuring out what would be the next step up from the readily available SWIFT SW380T and where I could find other options?
RU-vid keeps surprising me with unique uploaders I never knew existed. I am in LOVE with your cat! So beautiful and fluffy. Also I think that the butterfly was sort of respectful, instead of just throwing it away. Now the world get to see those beautiful wings and appreciate even the tiniest creatures. Thank you! (Ps, give your cat lots of cuddles from me)
This was a random recommendation for me too. It makes me happy to see this stuff for some reason. Good to be able to be grateful for the beauty in life!
The most beautiful exhibition of microscope I saw was actual sand Originally we were looking at jewelry but the sand particles were just amazingly beautiful
I'd love to see various flower pollen under a microscope, also tiny corals and natural sponges, the mouthparts of both a spider and a fly, and plaque on a tooth.
You made a terrific video and the enlarged UV lit images, no matter what their source, were fascinating and very beautiful. Scientific Inquiry and Artistic Aesthetics. I am impressed.
The Butterfly such simple yet very complex proof of our Creator God! He made that butterfly so flawless because God through Jesus Christ is flawless Himself!! Evidence of our Creator is all around us. Its not hard to see it yet impossible for many!! God bless you all!! Much LOVE!!!!!
I stumbled upon this channel at 2 am and I do have to say. I appreciate that you're willing to show anything for science. I've missed people showing things just... blank slate, this is what it is, and scientifically this is what it means. for a while. Science is beautiful. it's what helped all of us be us *if you believe that* I had a science teacher who was very catholic whose mindset was. "God might have created us, but he gave us the ability to understand the depths of his creation*. but I think more people deserve to educate themselves in this manner without being offended or grossed out. It's science.
We in India make yogurt/curd at home and consume it. If you have some left over yogurt, you can add that to warm milk, mix it and let it rest in warm temperature. It takes some time in cooler areas.
Do you mind sharing the specifications of your microscope and camera you used? Also, how would you be able to take photos of a microscopic view of a snow flake or ice pattern? I heard another guy using nail polish to immortalize the snowflake imprint on a slide, but is there another way? Especially for ice. I am looking to see patterns in different types of water freezing. Please advise. Thank you.
looking at the butterfly wings makes me wonder how it would look if you made fabric out of a whole bunch of tiny scales in the same shape, i wish i had the patience to try this myself
What microscope do you use. And how did you make the pimple change colors? (Wow what a weird sentence lol). But was that an additional f function of your microscope, or was that like a separate dye you bought?