The Royal Institution
Marty Jopson makes an entire world invisible to the naked eye visible in this demo and image filled talk.
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Take a journey from everyday life, down into the realm of microscopical wonders with Marty Jopson, the BBC One Showβs resident scientist. The adventure begins with things you can almost see but soon you will find yourself in a world totally invisible to the unaided eye. Marty will take you from the very beginnings of microscopy, through hugely magnified insects, bacteria and plants to the most up to date fluorescent techniques demonstrated live on the stage.
This show is supported by Zeiss, global leaders in the manufacture of microscopes.
Marty Jopson is a science TV presenter, live show performer, writer and strange prop builder. He has been making science television for over twenty years and has worked behind the camera as a researcher, prop builder, director, producer, executive and company manager. His career as a presenter spans over ten years as the science reporter on the BBC1 flagship programme, The One Show. He’s also appeared on regional, national and international series like Invention Nation (BBC1), The House the 50s Built (C4), Food Factory (BBC1) and Brainiac (Sky1).
When not on television, he spends much of his time on stage performing hair-raising and flammable science at science festivals around the country. He has also published two books with Michael O’Mara Publishing, The Science of Everyday Life and The Science of Food.
This talk and Q&A was filmed in the Ri on 13 October 2018.
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Wanted to let you know there's an ad for one of those snake oil herbal remedies for the common cold on this video. It doesn't exactly seem like the sort of product that the RI should be endorsing or even affiliated with. I think the product was called coldrops.
Yay! A microscopical safari!
is anyone else disappointed when the royal institution uploads a single video and it ends after only an hour?
very lovely and beautiful man.Awesome lecture.Thanks team Ri.
I wish I could be a scientist
Seriously the spider ruined the whole experience
30:00 "but this time we need a sample from the head." I always thought the mouth was somewhere in your head.
Wonderful tour of microscopic creatures,cells and activities! I so loved working with microscopes in my career – miraculous stuff going on in those dimensions!! Thanks for really engaging,fascinating presentation.
We can target any A. C. G. T. for termination…
Can't wait to show this video to my 7yo son.
The link to the Q&A is wrong π
The thing that always amazes me about watching stuff on RI is knowing that Micheal Faraday lectured at that very same desk. Very cool
21:49 lol she stumbled on her way down.
I bought a pocket microscope, it does like 60-120x and it is amazing – the amount of detail you get to see just by something that fits in my palm, now every bug I find dead I spend an hour or two observing every detail and one time I was looking over an autumn fly and I noticed 2 rows of dented domed shaped circles along its back and with a little bit of research I found out they are Ocelli which are simple eyes – a fly can see from its back (just light and dark, but it has that knowledge), I would never have looked into this or found it out if I haven't just dived in and looked myself.
I might now have formed a slightly unhealthy obsession with invertebrates, but I'm not alone luckily.
I'm not trying to advertise it but I love it and may as well show people it exists Β£15 on Amazon https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00LAX52IQ/ (this is a newer version of the one the Natural History Museum used to sell)
He is the smart one of the Three Musketeers.
I wonder, in that last part where you see the cell in the middle of division, whether you can actually see the division happening in real time? Or is it too slow to notice?
Now I am even more scared of spiders.
Iβm actually quite bored.
interesting post..thanks
A great talk, I like the way the Marty explains how microscopy works.
Did anyone else think of Simon Pegg while watching this?? π
awesome video btw
πππππ»
Great job Marty Jopson! This was awesome!
6y old just commented: Where is his ship?
I wondered what kind of ship?
"A Pirate ship"
Marrrty Barbosa. π
Optical microscopy with wavelength limits.
You look like Richard Branson!
Every single one of these lectures are filled with passion.
I'm left wondering if anyone caught the "blowing up sewers" reference…
his mustache deserves its own lecture
I wish there was a regular micro-safari show. An episode released every week or something.There are plenty of science TV programs that have shown microscopic creatures but they are heavily produced and focus only on a few things they consider interesting. I'd rather have an informal show where you aren't really sure what you'll find.
It's kind of like nature shows that focus on elephants, tigers, and pandas. Yes, they are cool and sometimes cute but they have been done to death. Show us new things. The world is filled with amazing creatures that are very important and yet most people are only aware of a extremely small number of them.
This guy has so much energy i love it. The buggs creep me out though
Wood louse related to the lap lobster.
Loved the Monty Python reference at 46:45! π
Very cool video!
Would have been better to put the samples on x-y-z manual translation stages for better control of the image, that way you can "fly" slowly above the microscopic safari.
He lost me when he excluded me from his standard height range.
oh look the female spider has the same moustage.dutchspyglasslol
YES! This is how I imagined scientists would be like, when I was younger. This was so awesome. Thank you, RIβ€
The world under a microscope with Billy Connellys scientific younger brother!! π
Animation like at 9:04 & 13:48 is defintely one way to keep a young audience interested! >XD
I love this guy! If all of us were so passionate about our jobs the world would be a better place and all of us would be happier.
Glossing over the mustache, brilliant video
wow
Ok boomer