Fluorescent markers combined with the reagents are automatically
read by a microscope to determine the precise concentrations in each droplet and also observe how the reaction proceeds.
Not exact matches
The revolution began quietly in 1981, when Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer at IBM in Zurich invented the scanning tunneling
microscope (STM), which could
read a surface atom
by atom.
Data is
read by scanning gaps between atoms and the
microscope's probe.
The project was born in 2011, when Golshani
read about a miniaturized
microscope developed at Stanford University that was light enough to be worn
by a laboratory mouse.
By taking slides or an Ovulation Smear we can
read if there are cornified epithelial cells under a
microscope.
[25] Bui has curated other exhibitions at various galleries including recent work
by Ron Gorchov at Cheim &
Read [26] as well as Exquisite Fucking Boredom, a exhibition of Polaroid images
by artist and writer Emma Bee Bernstein at
Microscope Gallery.