Tags: Fluorescence Imaging with One-Nanometer Accuracy (FIONA)

Description

Fluorescence Imaging with One-Nanometer Accuracy (FIONA) is a technique for localizing a single dye, or a single group of dyes, to within ~1-nm accuracy. This high degree of precision is achieved using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, deoxygenation agents, and a high quantum yield, low-noise detector.

For nanoHUB Simulation see: FIONA

Courses (1-2 of 2)

  1. [Illinois] ECE 564: Modern Light Microscopy

    Courses | 11 Apr 2016 | Contributor(s):: Gabriel Popescu

    Current research topics in modern light microscopy: optics principles (statistical optics, Gaussian optics, elastic light scattering, dynamic light scattering); traditional microscopy (bright field, dark field, DIC, phase contract, confocal, epi-fluorescence, confocal fluorescence); current...

  2. Illinois Physics 498: Introduction to Biological Physics

    Courses | 07 Apr 2008 | Contributor(s):: Paul R Selvin

    We will apply simple yet powerful ideas of physics to gain some understanding of biology. (What is the inertia of a bacteria and how does this affect its behavior?) We will begin with atoms, move to molecules, then macromolecules, then cells, and finally whole systems. For example, how do we...