Now Streaming: Catch the Raman Spectroscopy Summit On-Demand
Register
Sign In
Subscribe
Advertise
Publications
Photonics Spectra
BioPhotonics
Vision Spectra
Photonics Showcase
Photonics Buyers' Guide
Photonics Handbook
Photonics Dictionary
Newsletters
Bookstore
News & Features
Latest News
Latest Products
Features
All Things Photonics Podcast
By Technology
Lasers & Light Sources
Optics
Materials & Coatings
Imaging
Sensors & Detectors
Test & Measurement
Integrated Photonics
Spectroscopy
Biophotonics
Machine Vision
Marketplace
Supplier Search
ProdSpec Product Search
Career Center
Webinars & Events
Webinars
Photonics Media Virtual Events
Industry Events Calendar
Resources
White Papers
Videos
Contribute an Article
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a Member
Publications
Photonics Spectra
BioPhotonics
Vision Spectra
Photonics Showcase
Photonics Buyers' Guide
Photonics Handbook
Photonics Dictionary
Newsletters
Bookstore
News & Features
Latest News
Latest Products
Features
All Things Photonics Podcast
By Technology
Lasers & Light Sources
Optics
Materials & Coatings
Imaging
Sensors & Detectors
Test & Measurement
Integrated Photonics
Spectroscopy
Biophotonics
Machine Vision
Marketplace
Supplier Search
ProdSpec Product Search
Career Center
Webinars & Events
Webinars
Photonics Media Virtual Events
Industry Events Calendar
Resources
White Papers
Videos
Contribute an Article
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a Member
Register
Sign In
submit press release
Imaging News
Simplified Superlens Captures IR Light
BERKELEY, Calif., March 31, 2011 — Superlenses fabricated from perovskite oxides are simpler and easier to fabricate than metamaterials and are ideal for capturing light in the mid-infrared range, potentially opening the door to highly sensitive biomedical detection and imaging, say researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The superlensing effect also may be selectively turned on and off, which would make possible highly dense data writing and storage.
Seeing Below the Surface
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 30, 2011 — A new approach to detecting internal damage in planes and other objects that employs a simple handheld device and heat-sensitive camera promises to replace traditional infrared thermography techniques that require the use of large heaters.
Gooch & Housego Partners with TechnoTeam
ORLANDO, Fla., March 29, 2011 — The Life Sciences and Instrumentation Div. of Gooch & Housego has entered into an agreement with TechnoTeam Bildverarbeitung GmbH of Germany to distribute the latter’s LMK imaging photometer systems in North America. The LMK series...
Light Joins Nanoparticles into New Materials
ARGONNE, Ill., March 29, 2011 — A low-power laser — similar to the common office laser pointer — can cause gold and carbon nanoparticles to assemble into long chains that follow the laser beam as it moves. Researchers from Argonne National Laboratory shined a...
NASA Tests New Microscope for ISS
CLEVELAND, March 29, 2011 — NASA recently began tests of a new multicapability microscope that is expected to help scientists study the effects of the space environment on physics and biology aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The microscope is isolated from...
Cell Imaging Improves Under Graphene
MANHATTAN, Kan., March 28, 2011 — A microscopic cloak made of graphene could change the way bacteria and other cells are imaged. Vikas Berry of Kansas State University and his research team are wrapping bacteria with graphene to address challenges with imaging bacteria under...
Synchrotron-Based Tissue Imaging
MILWAUKEE, March 28, 2011 — With intensity a million times brighter than sunlight, a new synchrotron-based imaging technique offers high-resolution pictures of the molecular composition of tissues with unprecedented speed and quality. Carol Hirschmugl, a physicist at the...
Dynasil Detection Patents Approved
WATERTOWN, Mass., March 24, 2011 — Radiation Monitoring Devices Inc., the research division of Dynasil Corp., has been granted additional US patent claims for its advances in a detector material capable of responding independently to both neutron and gamma radiation. The...
BU, UC Davis Launch Biophotonics Center
BOSTON, March 23, 2011 — A new research collaboration will be formed by Boston University and the University of California, Davis, under a grant from the National Science Foundation that fosters university-industry collaboration. The new Center for Biophotonic Sensors and...
Camera as Small as a Grain of Salt Built
BERLIN, March 23, 2011 — A microcamera for endoscopy applications developed by a German collaboration promises to be so inexpensive as to be disposable. Endoscopy has gone through amazing advancements in recent years. Microcameras on the tip of endoscopes supply...
Light Used to Move Molecules
BALTIMORE, March 23, 2011 — Light-triggered chemistry can help move individual molecules around inside living cells, sending them to exact locations at precise times. This new tool, according to its developers at Johns Hopkins University, will allow visualization of how...
Protein in Ancient Reptile Skin Imaged
MANCHESTER, England, March 23, 2011 — A nondestructive infrared imaging technique has exposed organic compounds (amides) surviving in 50-million-year-old fossilized reptile skin, revealing intricate chemical patterning that previous methods had overlooked. Produced by University of...
Silencing a Gene: It’s a Stretch
TUCSON, Ariz., March 23, 2011 — Cells may control genes by simply stretching them, a discovery that could pave the way for applications that require precise control over gene expression, such as with a lab-on-a-chip device.
Novel Lens Simplifies 3-D Microscopy
COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 22, 2011 — A new lens designed by engineers at Ohio State University enables microscopic objects to be seen from nine angles simultaneously to create a 3-D image. 3-D imaging typically is achieved using multiple lenses or cameras that move around an object....
Sensor Design Boosts Raman Signals
PRINCETON, N.J., March 22, 2011 — An extremely sensitive Raman sensor promises to provide new ways to detect a wide range of substances, from tell-tale signs of cancer to hidden explosives. The sensor, developed at Princeton University, relies on a completely new architecture and...
Light Scattering Controlled in Graphene
BERKELEY, Calif., March 21, 2011 — Controlling the way light is scattered in graphene has been achieved, providing a new tool for the study of these single sheets of carbon that may lead to practical applications for controlling light and electronic states in nanometer-scale devices...
Samsung Licenses OptiML from Tessera
SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2011 — Miniaturization technologies provider Tessera Technologies Inc., maker of the OptiML Zoom image enhancement solution for miniature cameras, announced that the System LSI Div. of Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. has licensed that technology. The...
Marburg Tests Leica Nanoscope
MARBURG, Germany, March 16, 2011 — Philipps-Universität Marburg is working with Leica Microsystems on microscope technology that will provide resolution below the diffraction limit. The new optical nanoscopy, called GSDIM (ground state depletion microscopy followed by individual...
Matcher Takes 6-month Assignment at Michelson Diagnostics
ORPINGTON, England, March 16, 2011 — Dr. Stephen Matcher, senior lecturer in biomedical engineering at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Sheffield, has been matched with imaging developer Michelson Diagnostics for six months to provide optical...
Matter Imaging Moves Forward
QUEBEC CITY, March 16, 2011 — New information on the electronic structure of atoms and molecules is now available because of first-ever observations of electronic correlations using high harmonic generation. This breakthrough opens new opportunities for investigating electron...
Optics, Electronics Makers Assess Quake Damage
TOKYO, March 16, 2011 — The impact of last week’s historic earthquake and tsunami off the east coast of Honshu, Japan, on optics and electronics makers has been mixed, with some reporting injured workers and severe structural damage to facilities, while others are...
Edmund Employees in Japan Are Safe
BARRINGTON, N.J., March 15, 2011 — Edmund Optics reports that all of its employees in Japan are safe and there is no major structural damage to its factory. The company will continue to assess any potential damage to the infrastructure stability, inventory levels and the impact on...
Robonaut Features Advanced Vision
STADTRODA, Germany. March 15, 2011 — When the space shuttle Discovery returned recently after its last mission to the International Space Station, it left behind a passenger that will never return to Earth. Astronauts on the mission delivered a humanoid robot dubbed Robonaut 2, a...
Student Innovators Improve Imaging
TROY, N.Y., and PASADENA, Calif., March 15, 2011 — The latest winners of the Lemelson-MIT Rensselaer Student Prize have been named, with prizes going to students using terahertz technology at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and California Institute of Technology (Caltech). Benjamin...
CEA-Leti Joins Alcatel-Lucent, Thales in III-V Lab
SACLAY, France, March 14, 2011 — In a move to strengthen the industrial research capabilities of the III-V Lab, Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, Thales and CEA-Leti have announced that CEA-Leti will join the center. The public-private partnership will combine III-V semiconductor and...
<
1
2
3
...
154
155
156
157
158
...
204
205
206
>
(5,131 results found)
April 2024
Subscribe
Advertise
Issue Library
Latest Products
Combination Transceiver Module
Integra Optics
High-Speed SWIR Camera
New Imaging Technologies (NIT)
AI FPGAs
Intel Corp.
Nano-Focus Scanners
PI (Physik Instrumente) LP, Motion Control, Air Bearings, Piezo Mechanics
COB Module
Violumas Inc.
Zoom-Enabled 3D Scanner
Hexagon AB
Infrared Glass
LightPath Technologies Inc.
LED Lighting Controllers
Advanced illumination (Ai)
AI 3D Vision System
Cognex Corp.
Portable 3D Scanner
3DMakerPro
Features
3D-Stacked CMOS Sparks Imaging’s Innovation Era
Photonics Spectra
, Apr 2024
Software-Defined Photonics Orchestrates Light in Future Data Centers
Photonics Spectra
, Apr 2024
A Quantum Leap for Sensitive Gas Analysis
Photonics Spectra
, Apr 2024
Explore Our Content
News
Features
Latest Products
Webinars
White Papers
All Things Photonics Podcast
Videos
Our Summits & Conferences
Industry Events
Bookstore
Join Our Community
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a member
Sign in
Contribute a Feature
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Mobile Apps
About Us
Our Company
Our Publications
Contact Us
Career Opportunities
Teddi C. Laurin Scholarship
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
©2024 Photonics Media
100 West St.
Pittsfield, MA, 01201 USA
[email protected]
We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our
Privacy Policy
. By using this website, you agree to the use of
cookies
unless you have disabled them.