Logo

Existential Romance

  • INKTSPATTEN.NL
  • #atwomic -a twitter comic-
  • NanoGraphicmo project
  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
sciencesoup:

The Birth of Brain Cells
This might look like a distant web of galaxies captured by a powerful telescope, but it’s actually a microscopic image of a newborn nerve cell. The human brain contains more cells than there are stars in our galaxy, and the most important cells are neurons, which are nerve cells responsible for transmitting and processing electro-chemical signals at up to 320 km/h. This chemical signalling occurs through synapses—specialised connections with other cells, like wires in a computer. Each cell can receive input from thousands of others, so a typical neuron can have up to ten thousand synapses—i.e., can communicate with up to ten thousand other neurons, muscle cells, and glands. Estimates suggest that adult humans have approximately 100 billion neurons in their brain, but unlike most cells, neurons don’t undergo cell division, so if they’re damaged they don’t grow back—except, apparently, in the hippocampus (associated with memory) and the olfactory bulb (associated with sense of smell). The process by which this occurs is unclear, and this image was taken during a project to determine how neurons are born—it actually depicts newborn nerve cells in an adult mouse’s brain.
(Image Credit: Dana Bradford)
Pop-upView Separately

sciencesoup:

The Birth of Brain Cells

This might look like a distant web of galaxies captured by a powerful telescope, but it’s actually a microscopic image of a newborn nerve cell. The human brain contains more cells than there are stars in our galaxy, and the most important cells are neurons, which are nerve cells responsible for transmitting and processing electro-chemical signals at up to 320 km/h. This chemical signalling occurs through synapses—specialised connections with other cells, like wires in a computer. Each cell can receive input from thousands of others, so a typical neuron can have up to ten thousand synapses—i.e., can communicate with up to ten thousand other neurons, muscle cells, and glands. Estimates suggest that adult humans have approximately 100 billion neurons in their brain, but unlike most cells, neurons don’t undergo cell division, so if they’re damaged they don’t grow back—except, apparently, in the hippocampus (associated with memory) and the olfactory bulb (associated with sense of smell). The process by which this occurs is unclear, and this image was taken during a project to determine how neurons are born—it actually depicts newborn nerve cells in an adult mouse’s brain.

(Image Credit: Dana Bradford)

(via cannibalfetus)

Source: sciencesoup

    • #science
    • #brain
    • #galaxy
    • #dana bradford
  • 10 months ago > sciencesoup
  • 1614
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Existential Romance

Avatar Existential romance is an eclectic collection of tidbits, geekisms and original fiction, held together with carbon black duct-tape. Curious about my original art? Visit inktspatten.nl

Me, Elsewhere

  • inktspatten on Behance
  • My Cargo Collective Site
  • @@yskaya on Twitter
  • csdenou on Flickr
  • Google
  • My Skype Info
  • Linkedin Profile

!tweet!

loading tweets…

Intersting or Funny

See more →
  • Photoset via jesuschristwasanonlychild

    yabasha:

    itscarororo:

    satanic2chainz:

    birdstump:

    Lois, Jimmy and Clark designs: take three — by Brittney Williams

    all of...

    Photoset via jesuschristwasanonlychild
  • Photo via missspite

    theantidote:

    Dark In Light, Light In Dark by Katka Prackova

    (via inneroptics:)

    Photo via missspite
  • Photoset via missspite

    221-boheme:

    Absinthe Sherlock


    For Let’s Draw Sherlock, based off of the Absinthe Robette poster by Henri Privat-Livemont (one of my...

    Photoset via missspite
  • Photo via lerms

    Baibai #365rounds #ipadsketch

    Photo via lerms
  • Photo via skottieyoung

    Sesame Street sketches

    Photo via skottieyoung
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Mobile

all content © Calliope den Ouden unless otherwise noted. .

Effector Theme by Pixel Union