Light Microscopy – News and Features
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DNA Nanotech Enhances Mass Cytometry Sensitivity 500-Fold
ACE, a new DNA-powered signal amplification technology, dramatically increases sensitivity of mass cytometry, opening new windows on many biological and pathological processes.
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Did Rembrandt Deliberately Use Arsenic in His Gold Paint?
New analysis of Rembrandt's paintings indicates he may have used arsenic pigments to create a golden luster.
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New Technique Pinpoints Nanoscale “Hot Spots” in Electronics To Improve Their Longevity
Borrowing methods from biological imaging, Rochester engineers have developed a way to spot tiny, overheated components that cause electronics’ performance to degrade.
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Researchers Identify Brain Circuits Tied to the Behavior of Schooling Fish
Collective social behaviors, such as fish schooling, are remarkable displays of behavioral complexity in the natural world. Researchers have pinpointed some of the brain circuits tied to this behavior.
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Ultrafast Laser Tech Can Spot Atomic-Level Defects in Semiconductors
By combining high-resolution microscopy with ultrafast laser pulses, physicists can spot single-atom “defects” on a semiconductor surface.
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Novel PET Tracer Detects Parkinson’s Disease in Living Patients
Researchers from Japan have successfully developed a chemical radiotracer that binds to α-synuclein fibrils, harmful protein aggregates typically seen in PD and DLB pathologies.
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Researchers Identify a Cheaper, More Convenient Method To Detect Asbestos
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has been used to test for asbestos in samples for decades, but TEM can be expensive. Now, researchers have determined that scanning electron microscopy can achieve results comparable to TEM.
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Hepatitis E in Sperm Raises Sexual Transmission Possibility
Discovering that hepatitis E virus is associated with sperm in pigs suggests the virus may be both sexually transmitted and linked to male infertility, according to a new study.
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“Synthetic” Cell Follows Chemical Directions, Advancing the Search for New Drug Delivery Systems
Scientists have developed a minimal synthetic cell that follows external chemical cues and demonstrates a governing principle of biology called “symmetry breaking.”
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How Is the Immune System Affected by Space Travel?
Two Buck scientists led a team that has revealed for the first time how the lack of gravity affects the cells of the immune system at single cell resolution.
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