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Results 17961 - 17970 of 17976 for Imaging
  • News - 8 Jul 2007
    In efforts that can improve studies of biological objects and the construction of nanotech materials, researchers at the University of California-Berkeley have invented "optoelectronic...
  • News - 8 Jul 2007
    A University of Central Florida research team has made a substantial inroad toward establishing extreme ultraviolet light (EUV) as a primary power source for manufacturing the next generation of...
  • News - 8 Jul 2007
    In the last decades there has been a revolution in measuring time-dependent molecular motion, thanks to improvements in laser technology. One major step forward were femtosecond pulses; they are...
  • News - 8 Jul 2007
    Providing an update on progress and new findings on his optical tests for the early detection of Alzheimer's disease, Lee Goldstein of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School...
  • Article - 11 Oct 2007
    All forms of life in an aquarium environment require some sort of lighting, and this lighting affects its inhabitants.
  • Article - 26 Sep 2007
    When waves of light (or other forms of electromagnetic radiation) encounter a surface or boundary that does not absorb their energy, the waves bounce away from the surface.
  • News - 5 Jul 2007
    Following up on their well-received first book, Laser Beam Shaping: Theory and Techniques, Sandia National Laboratories researchers Fred Dickey and Scott Holswade have edited (with David Shealy of the...
  • News - 5 Jul 2007
    Engineers and applied scientists from Harvard University have demonstrated a new photonic device with a wide range of potential commercial applications, including dramatically higher capacity for...
  • News - 5 Jul 2007
    ESA's Darwin mission will look for extrasolar planets and signs of life. The Agency's Technology Research Programme has sponsored the development of critical optical components whose...
  • News - 5 Jul 2007
    We have to climb a mountain in order to conquer it. In quantum physics there is a different way: objects can reach the opposite side of a hill simply by tunnelling through it, instead of laboriously...

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