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Getting inside a fly’s head

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Caren B. Les, [email protected]

You can’t literally be a proverbial fly on the wall to spy on confidential conversations, but you can at least get inside a fly’s head – thanks to an ultramicroscope from the Vienna University of Technology. The instrument can image in 3-D the tiniest features of biological tissues, such as the smallest blood vessels and the thin branches of nerve tracts or even the neuron network of a mouse brain. In one test, its developers created a finely detailed image of the interior of a fly’s head. The standard light-sheet ultramicroscope setup was developed in the...Read full article

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    Published: March 2013
    Glossary
    ultramicroscope
    A dark-field microscope used to view extremely small objects. These objects are suspended in a gas or liquid in an enclosure having a black background. A convergent pencil of bright light enters from one side and comes to focus in the field of view (Tyndall cone) to illuminate the objects. Thus, these objects, unable to be detected by the microscope, form small diffraction ring systems that are perceived as minute, bright specks on a black background.
    2012 Higher Education Global Grant Program3-D imagingAmericasAustriaBiophotonicscamerasCaren B. LesEdmund OpticsEuropeflyHans Ulrich DodtImaginglight surface technologylight-sheet ultramicroscopeMicroscopyNew JerseyOpticsPicture Thiss headSaiedeh SaghafiultramicroscopeVienna University of TechnologyLasers

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