jimmydasaint Posted April 19, 2019 Posted April 19, 2019 Hi all out there, I am writing a short summary article on biological molecules etc... for my school and perhaps for the wider community. I want to make my article exciting by incorporating scientific images. I want to make it more exciting and include images of amino acids etc... but showing each individual atom. Is there animation/image software available for science education purposes? Alternatively, is there low cost software that can help me to bring my article to life? for example, something like this: Thanks, in advance
Bufofrog Posted April 19, 2019 Posted April 19, 2019 Blender is a free open source drawing and animation software. It is quite good, the learning curve is a bit steep but there is a whole community that uses it and lots of helpful tutorials.
jimmydasaint Posted April 19, 2019 Author Posted April 19, 2019 Thank you Bufofrog. I will try it out. How is Corel Draw?
Ghideon Posted April 19, 2019 Posted April 19, 2019 Have you sen molview or phet? Maybe build or find molecules you need and take screnshots or export? Note, I haven’t tested myself, I just got the links from a contact http://molview.org/?cid=297 https://phet.colorado.edu/sims/html/molecule-shapes-basics/latest/molecule-shapes-basics_en.html
Ghideon Posted April 19, 2019 Posted April 19, 2019 10 hours ago, jimmydasaint said: Is there animation/image software available for science education purposes? I tested Molview just for fun. I took a random compound, Aminoacetic acid, and it produced these two pictures*: *) I selected representation "Van der Waals spheres" and engine "Jmol".
jimmydasaint Posted April 22, 2019 Author Posted April 22, 2019 (edited) Superb - I have to check this out. Thank you. Hope it is royalty free. Edited April 22, 2019 by jimmydasaint
peterwlocke Posted April 23, 2019 Posted April 23, 2019 there is some good free 3d stuff like tinkercad wich you could screenshot.
Ghideon Posted April 23, 2019 Posted April 23, 2019 On 4/22/2019 at 10:13 AM, jimmydasaint said: Hope it is royalty free I'm by no means an expert in software licensing, but I checked http://molview.org/license and I find no reason to believe there are royalties (Gnu General Public License).
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