1348-2945 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2943 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2947 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2948 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2940 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2950 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1348-2946 - Coronavirus, virus of the family Coronaviridae and of the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae. View from a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image
1350-563 - University of Georgia researcher, Peggy Ozias-Akins;, sitting in front of microscope in her lab researching molecular genetics of peanut plants, Tifton, Georgia.
1348-2149 - Bacterium responsible for syphilis. Electron micrograph of Treponema pallidum on cultures of cotton-tail rabbit epithelium cells (Sf1Ep).Treponema pallidum is the causative agent of syphilis. In the United States, over 35,600 cases of syphilis were repor