imaging lens of an electron microscope is its heart

Categories: Comparisons

An example of an analogy used in public science discourse:

"What we did was drill a hole* through the imaging lens [of the microscope] to put the gas in, It's like drilling a hole through a person's heart, because imaging lens is the heart of the machine… even if we had made a fraction of a nanometre error we could have killed the poor machine."

Dame Pratibha Gai, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at York University was being interviewed by Prof. Al-Khalili on an episode ('Dame Pratibha Gai on training atoms to do what we want') of The Life Scientific.

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Many examples of science analogies are listed in 'Creative comparisons: Making science familiar through language. An illustrative catalogue of figurative comparisons and analogies for science concepts'. Free Download.

[* The lenses of electron microscopes are fields, not material, so possibly 'drill a hole' is meant as a metaphor?]

Read about metaphor in science

Read about examples of science metaphors

Many examples of science metaphors are listed in 'Creative comparisons: Making science familiar through language. An illustrative catalogue of figurative comparisons and analogies for science concepts'. Free Download.

Author: Keith

Former school and college science teacher, teacher educator, research supervisor, and research methods lecturer. Emeritus Professor of Science Education at the University of Cambridge.