Electron microscopy has evolved into a suite of sophisticated techniques essential for investigating the structure and properties of materials at the nanoscale and beyond. By utilising focused ...
The image pair captured in the banner shows the reduction in noise and increase in image quality between standard FDK imaging (left) and Zeiss DeepRecon Pro (right). Metal syntactic foam sample ...
Global health is changing as a result of developments in life sciences research and technology, and these advancements have the potential to offer innovative and improved approaches to promote a ...
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is a standard imaging technique for the structural characterization of surfaces in different fields of materials science, surface science, and biology. Carbon nanotubes ...
Two-photon microscopy is a type of fluorescence microscopy that, rather than exciting the sample with a single photon, makes use of multiple photons. The advantage over more traditional one-photon ...
Computational fluorescence microscopy (CFM) requires accurate point spread function (PSF) characterization for high-quality ...
Light microscopy is a key tool that scientists use to image cells, organelles, subcellular structures, and molecules such as proteins and nucleic acids. Because visible light leaves biological ...
Optical-resolution photoacoustic microscopy is an up-and-coming biomedical imaging technique for studying a broad range of diseases, such as cancer, diabetes and stroke. But its insufficient ...
Confocal microscopy is a specialized fluorescence imaging technique that scientists use to acquire images at greater resolution than conventional microscopy. 1 In addition to scanning the lateral x ...
SPRm (Surface Plasmon Resonance Microscopy) is a novel technology that enables label-free and real-time measurements of the binding affinity and kinetics of small molecules to G protein-coupled ...
C-C motif chemokine receptor-like 2 (CCRL2), is a non-signaling 7TM receptor, referred to as an atypical chemokine receptor (ACKR). Unlike conventional GPCRs, ACKRs are unable to activate G-protein ...