Mickael Febvre from Veeco takes us for a tour of the Bioscope Catalyst, which is an atomic force microscope (AFM) with an inverted optical microscope. The system is suited to biological applications.
Let us help you with your inquiries, brochures and pricing requirements Request A Quote Download PDF Copy Request A Quote Download PDF Copy Request A Quote Download ...
(Nanowerk News) Global piezo nanopositioning leader PI introduces a new microscope stage family designed for democratizing the advantages of ultrasonic piezo motor drive systems in super-resolution ...
What are the key features that have allowed you to streamline the inspection process and reporting? Continuously improving the integration of hardware and software has allowed the inspection to ...
Let us help you with your inquiries, brochures and pricing requirements Request A Quote Download PDF Copy Request A Quote Download PDF Copy Request A Quote Download ...
The new Cytation™ 7 Cell Imaging Multi-Mode Reader from BioTek Instruments combines an automated upright microscope, an inverted microscope, and multi-mode microplate detection in a single instrument.
The IX73 inverted microscope system sets new standards in advanced live cell imaging with its compact frame, outstanding optical performance and exceptional flexibility. Manual encoded or ...
The LV200 has been carefully designed for long-duration cell bioluminescence. A completely new optical design dramatically increases sensitivity and enables the detailed study of photosensitive cells ...
Leica Microsystems introduces the modular Leica DMi8 inverted microscope platform for industrial applications. Leica Microsystems introduces the modular Leica DMi8 inverted microscope platform for ...
The ioLight inverted microscope is a cost-effective and compact laboratory tool that is simple to use. Through a simple Wi-Fi connection, the inverted microscope enables images to be stored on a ...
The inverted Nikon spinning disk confocal microscope is equipped with four laser lines (405, 488, 561, and 647 nm), 4x-40x air objective lenses, and 60x NA1.40 and 100x NA1.45 oil objective lenses.
When Leonard Hayflick began his cell culture work at the Wistar Institute in the 1950s, the field was facing a nagging problem. Culture flasks were so big, that microscope objective lenses couldn't ...
一些您可能无法访问的结果已被隐去。
显示无法访问的结果
反馈