Researchers have developed a new type of microscope that can acquire extremely large, high-resolution pictures of non-flat objects in a single snapshot. This innovation could speed up research and ...
12don MSN
New 3D microscope technology captures high-resolution tissue images at a fraction of the cost
A team led by Raju Tomer, professor of biological sciences at Columbia University, has created a new design for microscopes ...
Metalenses represent a revolutionary advancement in optical technology. Unlike conventional microscope objectives that rely on curved glass surfaces, metalenses employ nanoscale structures to ...
Using an innovative combination of biochemical experiments and ultra-high-resolution microscopy, a research team at Kiel ...
Laser-driven thermoviscous flows provide contact-free rotation, transport or stabilization of delicate samples such as ...
Deep inside a small, windowless room at the University of California, Berkeley, two microscopes are quietly capturing some of ...
Understanding the behavior of the molecules and cells that make up our bodies is critical for the advancement of medicine. This has led to a continual push for clear images of what is happing beyond ...
Expansion microscopy, a super-resolution fluorescence microscopy technique in which samples are expanded up to ~8000 times (after 20-fold expansion) their original volume, places high demands on the ...
Researchers have developed a new two-photon fluorescence microscope that captures high-speed images of neural activity at cellular resolution. By imaging much faster and with less harm to brain tissue ...
Stimulated Brillouin scattering microscopy enables all-optical, non-contact, high-spatial-resolution mechanical imaging with high specificity. Recent advances in quasi-continuous-wave stimulated ...
In a study published in Science Advances, a research team led by Prof. Liu Chengbo from the Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology (SIAT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences developed a 1.7-gram ...
A new two-photon fluorescence microscope developed at UC Davis can capture high-speed images of neural activity at cellular resolution thanks to a new adaptive sampling scheme and line illumination.
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