What does it look like when you look at the newspaper photo with an electron microscope at different levels of magnification?

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1208256

2026-04-21 20:05

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An electron microscope is usually used to magnify things that are too small to be seen through a regular microscope. A news paper photo is printed with ink so the closer you get to it the more you would see the chemical composition of the ink, more so the texture. Some photos use pixelation meaning that the tiny dots that make up the picture would steadily get larger and farther apart the more you zoomed in until you were looking at the fibers of the paper or once again a very textural depiction of what ink is. However for things such as lettering you would inevitably see the texture of the dried ink in a much more detailed perception, and you would notice that there are tiny absences of the ink, where it dried with a certain amount of pressure, air or a protrusion of the paper in some places leaving tiny circles, too small to see with the eye, where there is no ink at all.

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