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Let's take a look at how to observe cells under a microscope. No prizes for guessing the first thing you'll need: a microscope. But don't worry if you don't have one of your own. Ask your school ...
Dr. James Lim, associate professor of pediatrics at UBC’s faculty of medicine, observes pediatric cancer cells grown in a ...
Imaging wall-less plant cells every six minutes for 24 hours revealed how the cells build their protective barriers.
Scientists need sharp tools to peek into the tiny world of biology, and fluorescence microscopy has been a game-changer ...
FLUMIAS is a high-resolution fluorescence microscope ... flows can be viewed in real time – changes, which are caused by the effect of changing gravitational conditions and microgravity. Numerous cell ...
With the invention of the microscope at the beginning of the seventeenth ... Hints at the idea that the cell is the basic component of living organisms emerged well before 1838–39, which was ...
Fission yeast and budding yeast are free-living haploid cells that are easily grown in the laboratory. They have different cell shapes and patterns of division. Left, fission yeast; right ...
The microscope ... "There's real biology that might be hidden to you from just a position change of a molecule alone," he ...
Therefore, we investigated the use of alkynes as tags for imaging under a Raman microscope ... by means of an EdU treated cell, we succeeded in the detection of Raman scattering derived from the ...
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