Image

Zoom Into the Human Bloodstream Illustration (Large)

Last update: January 20, 2010

Overview

Description

This award-winning illustration shows the circulatory system across ten orders of magnitude, from the heart to oxygen atoms in a red blood cell.

Vast scale differences are usually shown through separate images (e.g., the Eames’ Powers of Ten). This illustration employs the artistic convention of perspective—typically used by landscape painters—to show multiple scales in one frame.

This image travels from the human scale at top to the atomic scale in the foreground. Placing objects from the circulatory system in one frame clarifies connections between components, highlighting the system’s reliance on structures at very different scales. This illustration, created by the Exploratorium with illustrator Linda Nye, won the NSF/Science Magazine Visualization Challenge in 2008.

This is a medium resolution image file (4.7 MB). The image is also available as a smaller image file and as an annotated poster in the NISE catalog.

Checklist

Scientist reviewedcheck_reviewed
Peer reviewedcheck_reviewed
Visitor evaluationcheck_reviewed

Permissions

Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
You are free to copy, distribute, transmit or remix this work as long as you credit the work as specified. Work cannot be used for commercial purposes.

 

Questions?

Contact about items in the Catalog.

Search the Catalog

Who's online

There are currently 1 user and 5 guests online.