Andrea B. Posted December 30, 2014 Share Posted December 30, 2014 Blum, A. (2014) Citrus unshiu (Swingle) Marcow. (Rutaceae) Satsuma Tangerine. Fruit photographed in Visible and Ultraviolet light. UV-Induced Visible Fluorescence also included. http://www.ultraviol...suma-tangerine/ Synonyms:Wenzhou migan (Chinese: 温州蜜柑)Unshu mikan (Japanese)Naartjie (Afrikaans)Satsuma MandarinComment:This tangerine was purchased at a Whole Foods grocery. But I don't think it was an "organic" version because there appears to be some fluorescent residue from wax or sprays or something. References mention that the skin has many large prominent oil glands which might also be the cause of some of the fluorescent phenomena seen below. Note: The visible colour in the fluorescence photographs below was adjusted in the editor to match what was seen during the shoot, but the colour may not be entirely accurate. Reference:1. Wikipedia (30 Dec 2014) Citrus unshui. Wikimedia Foundation, San Francisco, CA.2. Andersen, Ferguson & Spann (Oct 2012) The Satsuma Mandarin. Publication #HS195, Horticultural Sciences Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. Equipment: D600-broadband + Zeiss 60mm f/4 UV-Planar Visible [baader UVIR-Cut Filter + Visible LED Flashlight]f/11 for 3" @ ISO-100 in DarknessThis tangerine is so pretty and interestingly textured. UV-Induced Visible Fluorescence [baader UVIR-Cut Filter + Nichia 365nm UV-LED Flashlight]f/11 for 3" @ ISO-400 in DarknessThe white balance is slightly too blue, but this was the best I could do this time. Ultraviolet [baader-U + Nichia 365nm UV-LED Flashlight]f/11 for 3" @ ISO-400 in DarknessThe tangerine is really UV-dark, but the skin is "shiny" so it's not easy to see that unless you compare several shots made with different lighting angles. We really need to experiment with a UV-polarizer someday. UV-Induced Visible Fluorescence [baader UVIR-Cut Filter + Nichia 365nm UV-LED Flashlight]f/11 for 2.5" @ ISO-500 in DarknessClose-up. That's the stem to the right. I don't know what the yellow patch is - dried tangerine juice perhaps? UV-Induced Visible Fluorescence [baader UVIR-Cut Filter + Nichia 365nm UV-LED Flashlight]f/11 for 2.5" @ ISO-500 in DarknessClose-up. None of the fluor patches looks at all like mold. Link to comment
colinbm Posted December 30, 2014 Share Posted December 30, 2014 All nicely done AndreaCol Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted December 30, 2014 Author Share Posted December 30, 2014 Thanks, Col. I like "painting with light" in the darkness. I am having second thoughts about eating these Tangerines. It might be a good idea never to shine UV upon ones food choices to see what actually lurks there. Of course, the stuff is only on the unedible peel. "-) Link to comment
Damon Posted December 30, 2014 Share Posted December 30, 2014 Wow that is fantastic! Nice and sharp and the colors are very interesting. Man that lens sure focuses close. Did you use any extension tubes? The closer you get the freakier some of these things look. Re: second thoughts--I thought about doing another post titled "What not to do with your UV light" and do all kinds of food and the stove top etc. It would be fun, informative and disgusting at the same time. Nice work. I have some clementines that I can try out. Did you wash your's first or no? -D Link to comment
Adrian Posted December 30, 2014 Share Posted December 30, 2014 I have also been photographing citrus fruit mould, in this case, a Satsuma, in UV fluorescence. Here, the fruit was visibly mouldy, though not as much as the UV showed!Adrian Davies Link to comment
colinbm Posted December 31, 2014 Share Posted December 31, 2014 Nice work AdrianIt sure shows where the mold is going to breakout next though.Col Link to comment
Damon Posted December 31, 2014 Share Posted December 31, 2014 Very interesting Adrian.That's some serious eye-popping yellow!Thanks for posting it. What was your lighting source regarding the fluorescence shot? -Damon Link to comment
Adrian Posted January 5, 2015 Share Posted January 5, 2015 I use two old (40 years?) PW Allen A409 light sources (condemned about 10 years ago from the bio lab in the college where I used to work because they failed a UK PAT test). I have been using them fairly constantly ever since. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted January 5, 2015 Author Share Posted January 5, 2015 That is some lovely blue-green mold, Adrian. Thanks for posting this fluorescence example. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted January 6, 2015 Author Share Posted January 6, 2015 Man that lens sure focuses close. Did you use any extension tubes? The UV-Planar, which is basically a specialized enlarger lens, has no built-in focusing helicoid and must be used with an add-on helicoid. Helis can be found in various extensions and lens/mount configurations on Ebay. I have threee - approximately 12-17mm, 17-30mm and 30-50mm. Link to comment
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