Flow cytometry is a way to look closely at the features of cells or particles. A sample of blood or tissue goes into a machine called a cytometer. In less than a minute, a computer can analyze ...
In the deep corridors of scientific research, where the significance of every penny spent and each microscope slide observed is scrutinized, something monumental is happening. Stratedigm, a San ...
Flow cytometers rely almost exclusively on lasers for excitation of fluorescent probes. Although lasers are excellent excitation sources, their discrete wavelengths limit the visible light that is ...
A research team from George R Brown School of Engineering and Computing (Rice University; TX, USA), led by Peter Lillehoj and Kevin Mchugh, have developed an innovative AI-enabled microfluidic ...
Find out how brightfield images can take your flow cytometry data to the next level. Join Dr. Cora Chadick, Technical Director of flow cytometry from Amsterdam UMC, as she demonstrates how easy it is ...
Flow cytometers need a mechanism to turn the light of excited fluorophores into an electronic signal. This is done by detectors, of which avalanche photodiodes is an increasingly popular one. The ...
Flow cytometry is a technique that analyses thousands of cells rapidly, with the data processed by a computer. Samples of cells contained in a fluid medium that has been labeled with fluorescent ...
Flow cytometry is a single-cell analytical technique that uses fluorophore-labeled cell structures or biomarkers to differentiate between cell populations. Through this method, researchers detect the ...
Flow cytometry provides a useful method by which scientists can measure and analyse different properties of individual cells, including size, internal complexity (granularity) and the presence of cell ...
After five decades of use, flow cytometry is entrenched in biomedical science. Besides enabling the quick processing of cells in suspension, flow cytometry provides quantitative results across ...
Around the same time, Mack Fulwyler, an engineer working at Los Alamos National Laboratory, needed to separate particles, so he drew on existing techniques to create droplets to separate cells from a ...