Nikon Small World
Nikon Small World is a photographic contest run by Nikon Instruments and a forum for showcasing the beauty and complexity of life as seen through the light microscope. It serves as a window into a world that can only be seen through the lens of an optical microscope. The contest comprises two separate competitions:
- The annual Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition is open to anyone with an interest in microscopy and photography from the widest array of scientific disciplines. The competition first began in 1975 as a means to recognize the efforts of those involved with photography through the light microscope. Any type of camera equipment and light microscopy technique is acceptable, including phase contrast, polarized light, fluorescence, interference contrast, dark-field, confocal, deconvolution, and mixed techniques.
- The annual Nikon Small World In Motion Competition encompasses any movie or digital time-lapse photography taken through the microscope. The competition was first announced in 2011 as a new category of the Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition.
Winners have included both professionals and amateurs. The prize-winners of each year are exhibited at museums and science centers throughout the United States and Canada. Many winning images are also featured in newspapers and on the covers of scientific and other journals. Nikon does not own the copyright and only requests an image or video release from those who have won for unrestricted permission with relation to the competition.
In 2023, the winning image was of the back of a rat’s eye and of its immune cells. Composed of multiple snapshots captured with a confocal microscope, the photo was taken by neuroscientist Hassanain Qambari of the Lions Eye Institute’s Centre for Ophthalmology and Visual Science in Perth, Australia.