Nanolive, a spin-out from the Swiss research institute EPFL, has launched the CX-A microscope system, said to be the first microscope to combine the power of the company's non-invasive 3D imaging ...
Nanolive SA announces the launch of its revolutionary microscope, the 3-D Cell Explorer; the official event will take place at ASCB 2015, next Monday, Dec. 14 starting at 5:30 pm in Theater 2 of the ...
The major limitation of microscopy is light itself: if we want to see an object smaller than the wavelength of visible light, we cannot use conventional optics. When it comes to imaging cells, the ...
Since the discovery of the cell as the basic unit of life in the 17 th century, scientists all around the world have been trying to investigate it deeper and deeper. This was not an easy task since ...
While scientists may still obtain a finer resolution using an electron microscope, this approach cannot be used to examine cells which are alive. For a long time, it was believed to be impossible to ...
This article was taken from the February 2015 issue of WIRED magazine. Be the first to read WIRED's articles in print before they're posted online, and get your hands on loads of additional content by ...
Nanolive is a biotechnology company that develops and manufactures microscopes for live cell imaging. The company was founded in 2013 and is based in Ecublens, Switzerland. Nanolive's microscopes use ...
NanoLive, an EPFL spin-off, has brought to the market a new MRI-like microscope and software that can 'see' living cells without any previous processing The major limitation of microscopy is light ...
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