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xSPEN imaging of the optic nerve. Including the inhomogeneity in the imaging process itself. Source: Weizmann Institute magazine.

Challenging and resonant

Source: pixabay.

See the night in a new light

Zebrafish brain imaging results. Left: Optical fluorescence microscopy imaging provides only a blurred image limited to the surface. Right: The optoacoustic FONT approach, on the other hand, provides a high-resolution XNUMXD image and detailed information on the activity of the neurons (orange dots) in real time, all over the brain. Photo: Helmholtz Center, Munich.

A window to the depths of the mind

Illustration: Ars Electronica / ra2 studio / Flickr. Used under a Creative Commons (CC-BY-NC-SA-2.0) license

The right to cognitive freedom

A new material has been developed that is quickly absorbed into the cells and which consists of crystalline sheets (nanosurfaces) trapped inside lipoprotein nanoparticles that allows a stable and constant emission of bright light. [Courtesy: Sung Jun Lim, University of Illinois]

Lipoprotein nanosurfaces for biological imaging

An innovative quantum imaging method produces images in which the photons never hit the bone - in this case an illustration of a cat. [Courtesy of Patricia Enigl, IQOQI].

Take a picture of Schrödinger's cat

The new method makes it possible to determine very quickly which substances, such as proteins and others, make up a product that is in powder form. [Courtesy of Iben Julie Schmidt]

X-ray imaging for quality assurance

Detection of a tumor using an MRI scan. Photo: shutterstock

A new radiation-free method for detecting cancer

A new molecular imaging technology that allows them to observe biometals and biomolecules simultaneously in a live mouse. Photo: Ricken Institute in Japan

A new imaging method for observing biomolecules

Scientists have for the first time been able to identify the precise spatial arrangement of the individual atoms in a nanoparticle. The yellow dots represent the atoms that make up a silver nanoparticle that are two nanometers in diameter.

Atomic resolution of XNUMXD nanoparticles

Schematic diagram of HIV. From Wikipedia

Determining protein structure will help cure AIDS

Researchers at the University of Gothenburg were able, using an advanced X-ray flash, to photograph the movement of atoms during photosynthesis.

Photographing the movement of atoms during photosynthesis

Prof. Haim Teitelbaum

Prof. Haim Teitelbaum was elected Rector of Bar-Ilan University

Prof. Lawrence Marnett, right, and his colleagues, Prof. Jashim Uddin, right, Prof. David Piston and Brenda Crews, research a compound that causes tumors to glow. Photography: Joe Howell

Luminescent compounds for the detection of cancerous tumors

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Popular Science/Capturing the T-rays

Cosmic scene with DNA, stars, solvents and atomic circles in oral flow.

Another step towards T-ray devices with perfect imaging capabilities