thumb|right|100× light micrograph of Meissner's corpuscle at the tip of a dermal papillus thumb|40× micrograph of a canine rectum cross section thumb|A photomicrograph of a thin section of a limestone with [[ooids. The largest is approximately 1.2 mm in diameter. The red object in the lower left is a scale bar indicating relative size.]] thumb|Approximately 10× micrograph of a doubled die on a coin, where the date was punched twice in the die used to strike the coin
thumb|right|100× light micrograph of Meissner's corpuscle at the tip of a dermal papillus thumb|40× micrograph of a canine rectum cross section thumb|A photomicrograph of a thin section of a limestone with [[ooids. The largest is approximately 1.2 mm in diameter. The red object in the lower left is a scale bar indicating relative size.]] thumb|Approximately 10× micrograph of a doubled die on a coin, where the date was punched twice in the die used to strike the coin
A micrograph is an image, captured photographically or digitally, taken through a microscope or similar device to show a magnified image of an object. This is opposed to a macrograph or photomacrograph, an image which is also taken on a microscope but is only slightly magnified, usually less than 10 times. Micrography is the practice or art of using microscopes to make photographs. A photographic micrograph is a photomicrograph, and one taken with an electron microscope is an electron micrograph.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).