Imaging-based single-cell physiological profiling holds great potential for uncovering fundamental bacterial cold shock response (CSR) mechanisms, but its application is impeded by severe focus drift ...
It turns out you can quite literally see an analog signal if the conditions are right—and you look closely enough.
Physicists have recreated the Nobel Prize–winning quantum Hall effect using light, revealing that photons can follow the same ...
To survive in areas where it is difficult to photosynthesize, some organisms adopt unique strategies. Osaka Metropolitan ...
A tiny metasurface chip can turn invisible infrared light into steerable visible beams, opening the door to powerful new ...
Lydia Love, DVM, DACVAA, shares practice safety tips including build psychological safety and use checklists to trap errors ...
Under the microscope, plankton becomes an unlikely star as artist Jess Holz documents their movements to highlight both their ...
Small choices—from phone communication to sedation protocols—can ease the euthanasia experience for families while helping ...
For more than 40 years, scientists have known that the quantum Hall effect impacts electrons in strong magnetic fields, but it turns out light also follows the fundamental phenomenon.
EyeRising and Sky-n1201 reached ANSI group 1 limits within exposure times of 2.8 and 1.4 seconds for a 7-mm pupil.
Humans have been studying and playing with light for millennia — from the ancient civilizations using rock crystals to magnify objects and focus sunlight to ignite fires, to Galileo who sparked the ...