News
Microscopic images released by scientists show how the coronavirus which causes COVID-19 appears to make cells which it has invaded grow tentacle-like protrusions. Researchers used special ...
Three-dimensional (3D) imaging is essential for investigating cellular structure and dynamics. Traditional optical methods ...
Researchers at EPFL have now developed a new microscopy technique that combines two existing ones, allowing scientists to build high-definition 3D images of cells inside and out.
Image of a maggot (left); the steroid producing cells with the maggot brain (middle); and an expanded image of the steroid producing cells (right). Note large nuclei (dense white area) of steroid ...
A laser technique similar to a CAT scan produces 3-D images of living cells without the need for chemical staining. Skip to content. Subscribe or renew today ...
Super-resolution 3-D microscopy images cells in unprecedented detail April 7, 2017 August 16, 2016 by Brian Wang A new ultra-high resolution “nanoscope” is capable of taking 3-D images of an entire ...
When obtaining three-dimensional images of cells using a scanning electron microscope, individual cells are scanned one section at a time and those images are then put together to form one ...
Electron microscope images reveal how cells absorb a vital mineral. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 4, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2017 / 12 / 171220131718.htm.
DNA microscope image of the same cells, showing genetic material. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. Almost unheard of in this era of collaborations that are often larger than a soccer team, ...
In a groundbreaking study on the synthesis of cellulose – a major constituent of all plant cell walls – a team of Rutgers University-New Brunswick researchers has captured images of the ...
Dahlberg combines the imaging techniques of cryogenic electron tomography and super-resolution fluorescence microscopy to obtain high-resolution images of things like this bacterial cell.
Red cell nucleus, green cytoskeleton: in microscopic images like this one, the AI developed at PSI recognizes the finest changes in chromatin – and thus genetic disorders. Credit: Paul Scherrer ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results