Michael Benson’s shot of a robber fly. The flower and fly collectively are barely wider than 1 centimetre throughout
© 2025 Michael Benson
A butterfly web, tweezers and a drawstring bag brimming with small plastic vials: it’s an uncommon toolkit for a photographer, however not for Michael Benson. Over six years, he gathered specimens for his new guide Nanocosmos: Journeys in electron area, a set of photographs depicting the microscopic world in outstanding element.
“I’m fascinated by the frontier between what we all know and what we don’t – a zone usually related to science,” he says. “However I’m going there as an artist, not as a scientist.”
Nonetheless, that hasn’t stopped Benson from utilising gear typically reserved for physicists and biologists. He produced each picture in Nanocosmos with highly effective scanning electron microscopes (SEMs), a know-how that emits a targeted beam of electrons to map the contours of a floor in astonishing element. The ensuing photographs seize Benson’s submillimetre topics with such readability that they virtually appear as if they’re from an alien planet.
Contemplate this Asilidae robber fly (fundamental picture, above) subsequent to a flowering plant from Alberta, Canada. The 2 collectively are solely barely wider than 1 centimetre throughout. However because of SEM know-how, we will see almost each hair on the fly’s physique, every claw on its leg and even a number of the thousand of particular person receptors that make up its bulbous eyes.
Benson first used SEMs in 2013 whereas working on the Massachusetts Institute of Know-how’s Media Lab. “There’s a steep studying curve in looking for to grasp the SEM, and it took me some years to get there,” he says. For instance, all the topics should be coated with “a molecule-thin layer of platinum in order that they don’t cost within the instrument’s electron beam”, he says, earlier than which they’re fastidiously dried to persevere their floor particulars.

The wing of a Erythemis simplicicollis dragonfly, about 3 millimetres broad, seen from the tip down
© 2025 Michael Benson
Above is Benson’s picture of a wing of the japanese pondhawk dragonfly (Erythemis simplicicollis), seen from the wingtip down. It’s native to the japanese two-thirds of the US, southern Ontario and Quebec, Canada. Quebec is the place this specimen as soon as known as dwelling. Its wing is about 3 millimetres broad.
Beneath is Benson’s shot of a single-celled marine organism (Hexalonche philosophic) from the equatorial Pacific that, tip-to-tip, measures 0.2 millimetres.

The marine organism Hexalonche philosophica, which is about 0.2 millimetres from finish to finish
© 2025 Michael Benson
One other marine organism, Ornithocercus magnificus (proven under), belongs to a species of plankton discovered within the Gulf Stream off Florida. It’s only about 0.1 millimetre broad.

The marine organism Ornithocercus magnificus is about 0.1 millimetre broad
© 2025 Michael Benson
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