Fluorescence imaging is the visualization of fluorescent dyes or proteins as labels for molecular processes or structures. It enables a wide range of experimental observations including the ...
The pharmaceutical industry needs robust elemental analysis techniques, and among the different approaches in the modern laboratory, X-ray fluorescence stands out as a particularly suitable ...
X-ray fluorescence spectrometers (XRFs) use a spectroscopic technique that is commonly used with solids, in which X-rays are used to excite a sample and generate secondary X-rays. The X-rays broadcast ...
X-ray fluorescence (XRF) is a non-destructive technique that uses low-level radiation to excite elements at known energy frequencies. It reveals an object’s elemental fingerprint, as unique as our own ...
What is Scanning X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Microscopy? Scanning X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Microscopy is a powerful analytical technique that enables the visualization and quantification of the elemental ...
Two-color fluorescence nerve and tumor visualization, with green color for the 700-nm LGW05-75 imaging channel (top) and red color for the 800-nm ABY-029 imaging channel (middle row), and with the ...
Therefore, out-of-focus fluorescence is dramatically minimized and almost no background fluorescence ... Therefore, TIRF has become the method of choice for imaging processes occurring at the bottom ...
The OXSAS™ X-ray Fluorescence Analytical Software from Thermo Scientific™ improves the user’s lab efficiency and productivity with a customizable software solution that operates with XRF spectrometers ...