New, unique microscope for nanotech
9th Dec 2005, 18:12 GMT
UC Davis researchers in nanotechnology, chemistry and biology now have access to one of the most advanced microscopes of its type in the world. The new Spectral Imaging Facility, opened this fall, is a combination of an atomic force microscope and a laser scanning confocal microscope, the first commercial machine of its kind.
New, unique microscope for nanotech related news:
- How Toxic is Nanotech? — EuroScience.Net
- Useful USB Gadget: The USB Microscope QX5 — I4U News
- Foresight Nanotech Institute Appoints Marc Lurie President; Nanotech Think Tank Poised for Growth — nanotechnology
- Future Watch >> USB Microscope QX5 — TechTree.com - Recent Stuff
- A television monitor shows the image from the operating microscope ... — Top Stories Photos on Yahoo! News Photos
- Advance Nanotech Announces Financing for Revolutionary Carbon Nanotechnology Project; Partnership with Cambridge University's CAPE Center Could Yield Faster, More Effective Process for Growing Carbon Nanotubes — nanotechnology
- The Buck(eye) stops here — bizjournals.com Sports Business:General headlines
- Le gouvernement ne veut pas de caisse unique — swissinfo RSS feed - Français
- Advance Nanotech Announces Financing for Revolutionary Carbon Nanotechnology Project — NSTI nanoPRwire
- Australia riots show 'militancy is not unique to Muslims' — KeralaNext: Asia
Latest news from EurekAlert! - Biology:
- Climate change creates dramatic decline in red-winged black bird population
- Developing uses for sugar-cane bagasse: Biotechnology applied to the paper industry
- University of Iowa scientists explore function of 'junk DNA'
- Tailored treatments: Promising designer drug provides new insight into cancer biology
- Scientists urge collaborative action to address effects of global environmental change
- New insight about the source of anxiety in Rett syndrome
- Sticky proteins provide new insight into drug action
- New study finds on/off switch for septic shock
- Transforming knowledge into economic benefits -- EPSRC's First Knowledge Transfer Challenge Awards
- Wielding the subtle weapons of a fungus