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Microscopy News
Scientists Observe Motion of Individual Atoms
PASADENA, Calif. -- PASADENA, Calif. -- In a development that could have far-reaching ramifications for single-atom science, physicists have created an "atom-cavity microscope" that uses single photons from a laser beam to track the motion of individual atoms. Researchers at the California Institute of Technology and the University of Auckland in New Zealand have constructed an optical cavity in which single photons manipulate an atom by quantum mechanical means. They placed a pair of highly reflective concave m...
Small Particles Could Find Big Uses
URBANA, Ill. -- URBANA, Ill. -- At the University of Illinois, a researcher may be on the way to something big by starting small. Physics professor Munir Nayfeh has developed a technique for creating nanoparticles out of bulk silicon. When excited, the...
Bio-Rad, Nikon to Produce Confocal Microscopy System
Apr 24, 2000 — HERCULES, Calif., April 24 -- Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc. has signed an agreement to collaborate with Japan's Nikon Corp. on the manufacture and marketing of a new microscopy system with capabilities for video rate confocal imaging. Under the terms of...
Advantages of Two-Photon Imaging
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- BUFFALO, N.Y. -- During the past decade, photon scanning tunneling microscopy has achieved resolution better than 100 nm, overcoming the optical diffraction limits. Recently, scientists at the State University of New York at Buffalo developed a...
Raman Method Identifies Pathogens Quickly
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands -- ROTTERDAM, Netherlands -- Raman spectroscopy and a confocal microscope may enable medical laboratories to dramatically reduce the time it takes to identify microorganisms so that doctors can make the right diagnoses. Researchers at Erasmus...
Researchers Unlock the Secrets of Diamonds
HONG KONG -- HONG KONG -- The captivating beauty of diamonds can overwhelm our sense of their utility. Still, their position as the hardest, most thermally conductive and most chemically resistant material known has a greater impact on us. Diamond coating...
Veeco Buys IBM's Atomic Force Microscope Assets
Mar 29, 2000 — PLAINVIEW, N.Y., Mar. 29 -- Veeco Instruments Inc. has purchased certain assets related to the Delray Beach, Fla.-based atomic force microscope (AFM) product line of International Business Machines Corp. (IBM). Don Kania, vice president and general...
Zeiss Chooses Metron Technology as European Repfor Microelectronic Systems
Mar 27, 2000 — JENA, Germany, Mar. 27 --The Carl Zeiss Semiconductor Technology business group's Microelectronic Systems division has transferred sales and service of its wafer and mask inspection microscope systems in Europe -- excluding Germany and The...
Optical Systems Created with Microlenses
Mar 1, 2000 — A research team from the Universität Mannheim in Germany has produced micro-objectives with a large numerical aperture by stacking gradient-index microlenses. The results, which were published in the Dec. 1, 1999, issue of Applied Optics,...
Raman Microscope Hits the Spot
Mar 1, 2000 — Seeing spots? It may not be your vision. It may be the image quality of your ink-jet printer. Spot size and density determine how sharp printed images appear. To improve both the speed and quality of their product, printer manufacturers such as...
Two Lasers Pump Atoms Through Nanotubes
EAST LANSING, Mich. -- EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Scanning tunneling microscopes can deposit individual atoms on surfaces, enabling researchers to study and modify nanostructures. Such microscopes do not have continuous capabilities, though, so are limited in transporting...
Fiber Eases Single-Molecule Detection
GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Several fluorescence techniques have emerged recently that meet the challenge of detecting single molecules. The emphasis now is on observing molecular reactions. Because many important biomolecular functions occur in an aqueous...
MIT Aids Microscopy Development
Feb 1, 2000 — Biologists at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., have agreed to develop a multimode microscopy system with Applied Precision Inc. of Issaquah, Wash., and Nikon Inc. of Melville, N.Y. The workstation will incorporate green...
NASA Readies Microscope for Space Mission
BROOK PARK, Ohio -- BROOK PARK, Ohio -- Scientists at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and Dynacs Engineering are adapting a microscope for the International Space Station’s fluid combustion facility. They are motorizing most of the...
Applied Imaging Wins UK Grant for Automated Cell Detection
Jan 12, 2000 — SANTA CLARA, Calif., Jan. 12 -- Applied Imaging Corp. has received a Smart Exceptional Project grant in the amount of £423,000 (about $680,000) from the United Kingdom's Department of Trade and Industry for the automated detection of...
Veeco Wins Orders for Automated Semiconductor Tools
Jan 11, 2000 — PLAINVIEW, N.Y., Jan. 11 -- Veeco Instruments Inc. has received multiple-unit orders valued at $4.7 million for its Dimension 9000TR atomic force microscope and its recently introduced chemical-mechanical polishing metrology tool, the Dimension...
'Stealth' Imager Helps Surgeons Treat Brain Tumors
Jan 6, 2000 — BALTIMORE, Jan. 6 -- Doctors at the University of Maryland Medical Center have a new imaging tool that brings more safety and precision to difficult brain and sinus surgeries. The device, known as the Stealth Station, combines computer technology...
MIT, Applied Precision, Nikon Join in Microscopy Project
Jan 6, 2000 — ISSAQUAH, Wash., Jan. 6 -- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) biologists are working with Applied Precision Inc. and Nikon Inc. to develop a multiple-mode microscopy system aimed at advancing the understanding of cellular behavior. The...
Imaging/Detectors: Scientific Imaging
Jan 1, 2000 — Five years ago, high-performance charge-coupled device cameras were slow, monolithic and difficult to use. Today, the cameras are significantly faster, often much smaller and almost completely software-controlled. In the coming several years, we...
Infrared Spectromicroscopy Technology Identifies Bacteria That Eat Toxic Waste
Jan 1, 2000 — Chemical and biological mechanisms had been suggested to explain the transformation of hexavalent chromium, a toxic industrial discharge, into a less dangerous trivalent form. Now scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley,...
Thin-Film Measurement Takes Aim on Target
Jan 1, 2000 — The sun is fueled by fusion. Its gravitational field compresses elements such as hydrogen under high temperatures until the molecules fuse and release energy. The process is both efficient and clean, prompting scientists in nuclear stewardship and...
Scientists Get First 3-D Images of Gene Machine
Dec 13, 1999 — BERKELEY, Calif., Dec. 13 -- Scientists at the University of California - Berkeley andLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) have obtained the first solid picture of a portion of the machinery that activates and deactivates genes. The...
Image Analysis System Packs Multifunctionality
Dec 1, 1999 — NASA’s Receipt Inspection Quality Assurance Lab reduces the percentage of non-conforming items being shipped to its Langley Research Center. The quality assurance facility, operated by Hernandez Engineering Inc. in Houston, scrutinizes all...
ChromaVision, UCLA Join on HIV Diagnostic Test
Nov 16, 1999 — SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif., Nov. 16 -- ChromaVision Medical Systems Inc. announced that it will collaborate with the School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, on feasibility studies to validate a new test to detect and...
Carl Zeiss Appoints New US President and CEO
Nov 5, 1999 — THORNWOOD, N.Y., Nov. 5 -- Carl Zeiss has appointed James J. Kelly as the new president and CEO of its US holding company, Carl Zeiss Inc. Kelly has served as general counsel, vice president of marketing, and manager of the microscopy group at Carl...
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July 2024
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