Wednesday, April 24, 2019
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Monthly newsletter focusing on how light-based technologies are being used in the life sciences. Includes news, features and product developments in lasers, imaging, optics, spectroscopy, microscopy, lighting and more. Manage your Photonics Media membership at Photonics.com/subscribe.
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sponsor
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Upconversion Materials Empower Thermal Bioimaging
Bioimaging is a fundamental technique for research in the life sciences, and it is used routinely in the medical industry. The procedure itself encompasses many different methods, such as electron microscopy, x-ray tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging, which are becoming increasingly popular. However, optical microscopy has advantages over these other methods: It is versatile and relatively inexpensive. For these reasons, fluorescence microscopy remains an essential tool for bioimaging in research laboratories.
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IR Light Illuminates Biotech Manufacturing
Medicine and biotech industries make and utilize high volumes of custom pieces, including prosthetics, implants, personalized medicine, and large-scale medical devices. Getting these products to market faster and more efficiently can save millions in revenue. However, production today is often bogged down by complex manufacturing processes with numerous iterative steps that contribute to long development cycles and process inefficiencies.
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Cleared Tissue Objective
Applied Scientific Instrumentation Inc.
The Cleared Tissue Objective is an immersion objective lens specifically designed for light sheet microscopy of cleared tissue samples (ct). The objective can be used with any ASI Light Sheet Microscopy configuration, enabling isotropic resolution without manipulating the sample. The 0.4 N.A. multi-immersion objective is designed for dipping media RI ranging from 1.33 to 1.56, >1 mm field of view,...
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The Next Generation Comes to Light
Lumencor Inc.
Lumencor’s new Spectra III Light Engine.
- Breadth: Eight spectrally optimized sources for DAPI, CFP, GFP, YFP, Cy3, mCherry, Cy5, Cy7 excitation
- Power: ~500mW / output, ~4W total
- Control: Exceptional power and wavelength stability
- Stability: Exceptional reproducibility
- Ideal for quantitation
- Ease of use: Small, cool, pre-aligned, Mercury-Free
- Applications: Fluorescence microscopy among others, OEM customization upon request
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1P/2P Super-Res TIRF Dichroic
IDEX Health & Science - Semrock Optical Filters
As multiphoton microscopy has increasingly become the norm within the microscopy community, the need to combine multiphoton and single-photon excitation has risen as a necessity for many emerging protocols. Effortlessly switch between confocal and multiphoton microscopy with Semrock’s newest 1P/2P super-resolution/...
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Cobolt Skyra™: The New Multi-line Laser
Cobolt AB
Cobolt AB, a part of HÜBNER Photonics, proudly market releases the Cobolt Skyra™, a revolutionary multi-line laser platform. With up to 4 wavelengths permanently aligned in a single compact package (70 x 134 x 38 mm) and requiring no external electronics, the Cobolt Skyra™ will enable the next generation...
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Microscopic Robots Made from Silicon, Powered by Light
Using novel nanofabrication techniques, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania and Cornell University have built micro-robots made from silicon and powered by solar cells. One million functional microscopic robots can be produced from a 4-in. silicon wafer.
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An international team of researchers has proven that dynamic optical coherence tomography (D-OCT) imaging of melanoma reveals changes to the blood vessels that correlate with the depth of its invasion, which could lead to a faster method of rapidly assessing the severity of a melanoma.
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Atom-flat sensors, made from 2D materials, could be used to monitor performance without adding weight or hindering signal flow if they could be seamlessly integrated onto surfaces with different geometries where detection for near-field signal is desired.
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Spectroscopic OCT: Seeing Under the Skin with Depth-Resolved Spectroscopy
Tue, May 14, 2019 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM EDT
This webinar, presented by Adam Wax, Ph.D., will introduce new methods for evaluating skin injury using spectroscopic measurements based on coherence imaging. These methods were developed by Wax and his group at the Biomedical Interferometry, Optics and Spectroscopy (BIOS) lab at Duke University. Wax will discuss spectroscopic OCT (SOCT), an extension of OCT technology for analyzing structural as well as spectroscopic information. He will present his lab’s application of SOCT for burn injuries and also address SOCT’s potential in the area of cancer detection.
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Features
Optics and Deep Learning, Computational Imaging, Absorption Spectroscopy, Biomedical Research
Photonics Media is currently seeking technical feature articles on a variety of topics for publication in our magazine BioPhotonics. Please submit an informal 100-word abstract to Senior Editor Justine Murphy at [email protected] or use our online submission form www.photonics.com/submitfeature.aspx.
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