A 3-D X-ray image showing the intricate surface of a velvet worm’s leg (left) and a view inside the tissue with highlighted muscle fibers (right) MUELLER, PFEIFFER / TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH Scientists from the Technical University of Munich have developed a computer tomography device that can create three-dimensional X-ray images of objects at resolutions of up to 100 nanometers. In a first, researchers tested the Nano-CT device to visualize the intricate limbs of a velvet worm–which are no longer than 0.4 millimeters–and glanced at the muscle within. Velvet worms are land-dwelling relatives of the insects that belong to the Onychophora phylum, meaning “claw-bearers.”

M. Müller et al., “Myoanatomy of the velvet worm leg revealed by laboratory-based nanofocus X-ray source tomography,” PNAS, doi:10.1073/pnas.1710742114, 2017.

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