The optics and performance of dual-focus fluorescence correlation
... ChemPhysChem 8, 433-443 (2007). A. Loman, T. Dertinger, F. Koberling, and J. Enderlein, “Comparison of optical saturation effects in conventional and dual-focus fluorescence correlation spectroscopy,” Chem. Phys. Lett. 459, 18-21 (2008). M. Böhmer, F. Pampaloni, M. Wahl, H. J. Rahn, R. Erdmann, and ...
... ChemPhysChem 8, 433-443 (2007). A. Loman, T. Dertinger, F. Koberling, and J. Enderlein, “Comparison of optical saturation effects in conventional and dual-focus fluorescence correlation spectroscopy,” Chem. Phys. Lett. 459, 18-21 (2008). M. Böhmer, F. Pampaloni, M. Wahl, H. J. Rahn, R. Erdmann, and ...
Diffusion and Osmosis
... – List the organelles that help to make proteins – What is the difference between the rough and the smooth endoplasmic reticulum? ...
... – List the organelles that help to make proteins – What is the difference between the rough and the smooth endoplasmic reticulum? ...
Vocabulary Notes
... The mass of one mole of substance. The term Formula Wt. is a general term. More specific terms are molar mass, atomic weight, & molecular weight. Eg. The mass of NaCl = 58.45 g/mol ...
... The mass of one mole of substance. The term Formula Wt. is a general term. More specific terms are molar mass, atomic weight, & molecular weight. Eg. The mass of NaCl = 58.45 g/mol ...
lecture# 21
... Ethyl butyrate (essence of pineapple) has the empirical formula C3H6O. In a gas effusion experiment, it took 1.62 times as long as CO2 to effuse. What is its molecular formula? t ∝ M1/2 ...
... Ethyl butyrate (essence of pineapple) has the empirical formula C3H6O. In a gas effusion experiment, it took 1.62 times as long as CO2 to effuse. What is its molecular formula? t ∝ M1/2 ...
Gilad Haran - Laboratoire Léon Brillouin
... study folding in real time. In particular, surface-tethered lipid vesicles are used for mild immobilization of protein molecules. This technique allowed us to obtain for the first time folding and unfolding trajectories of individual molecules. In addition, experiments on freelydiffusing proteins op ...
... study folding in real time. In particular, surface-tethered lipid vesicles are used for mild immobilization of protein molecules. This technique allowed us to obtain for the first time folding and unfolding trajectories of individual molecules. In addition, experiments on freelydiffusing proteins op ...
Diffusion and Human body
... Water, carbon dioxide, and oxygen are a few substances that are able to pass through the cell membrane without any help from the proteins embedded in the membrane. These materials can simply pass through the membrane without the use of energy and they will do so in an attempt to reach an equal solut ...
... Water, carbon dioxide, and oxygen are a few substances that are able to pass through the cell membrane without any help from the proteins embedded in the membrane. These materials can simply pass through the membrane without the use of energy and they will do so in an attempt to reach an equal solut ...
Nanoscopy with focused light
... Throughout the 20th century it was widely accepted that a light microscope relying on conventional optical lenses cannot discern details that are much finer than about half the wavelength of light (200-400 nm), due to diffraction. However, in the 1990s, the viability to overcome the diffraction barr ...
... Throughout the 20th century it was widely accepted that a light microscope relying on conventional optical lenses cannot discern details that are much finer than about half the wavelength of light (200-400 nm), due to diffraction. However, in the 1990s, the viability to overcome the diffraction barr ...
1. Atoms & Molecules
... Molecules want to move from an area of HIGH concentration to an area of LOW concentration. This is DIFFUSION. Rate of diffusion is affected by ...
... Molecules want to move from an area of HIGH concentration to an area of LOW concentration. This is DIFFUSION. Rate of diffusion is affected by ...
Basics in Confocal Microscopy Handouts
... In Total Internal Reflection (TIRF) microscopy light is coupled into the optics above a critical angle which reflects the light totally but creates an evanescent wave about 50-200 nm next to the reflecting surface (cover slip). ...
... In Total Internal Reflection (TIRF) microscopy light is coupled into the optics above a critical angle which reflects the light totally but creates an evanescent wave about 50-200 nm next to the reflecting surface (cover slip). ...
Mass Transport Laboratory
... Measurement of the Diffusion Coefficient of a Dye in Water Introduction: Diffusion coefficients are difficult to obtain directly. An alternative to direct measurement is to obtain measurements of the distribution of a diffusing species and apply a known mathematical analysis to back out the desired ...
... Measurement of the Diffusion Coefficient of a Dye in Water Introduction: Diffusion coefficients are difficult to obtain directly. An alternative to direct measurement is to obtain measurements of the distribution of a diffusing species and apply a known mathematical analysis to back out the desired ...
05.Kinetic Optical Properties of Colloids
... • The ESR is increased by any cause or focus of inflammation. The ESR is increased in pregnancy, inflammation, anemia or rheumatoid arthritis, and decreased in sickle cell anemia and congestive heart failure. The basal ESR is slightly higher in ...
... • The ESR is increased by any cause or focus of inflammation. The ESR is increased in pregnancy, inflammation, anemia or rheumatoid arthritis, and decreased in sickle cell anemia and congestive heart failure. The basal ESR is slightly higher in ...
Dual-color total internal reflection fluorescence cross
... a very thin 共⬍100 nm兲 optical excitation depth formed by an evanescent wave above a glass substrate, TIR fluorescence detection achieves an exceptional axial resolution and allows for the study of important cellular processes, in particular at or near the cellular membrane.1 Prominent biological app ...
... a very thin 共⬍100 nm兲 optical excitation depth formed by an evanescent wave above a glass substrate, TIR fluorescence detection achieves an exceptional axial resolution and allows for the study of important cellular processes, in particular at or near the cellular membrane.1 Prominent biological app ...
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is a correlation analysis of fluctuation of the fluorescence intensity. The analysis provides parameters of the physics under the fluctuations. One of the interesting applications of this is an analysis of the concentration fluctuations of fluorescent particles (molecules) in solution. In this application, the fluorescence emitted from a very tiny space in solution containing a small number of fluorescent particles (molecules) is observed. The fluorescence intensity is fluctuating due to Brownian motion of the particles. In other words, the number of the particles in the sub-space defined by the optical system is randomly changing around the average number. The analysis gives the average number of fluorescent particles and average diffusion time, when the particle is passing through the space. Eventually, both the concentration and size of the particle (molecule) are determined. Both parameters are important in biochemical research, biophysics, and chemistry.FCS is such a sensitive analytical tool because it observes a small number of molecules (nanomolar to picomolar concentrations) in a small volume (~1μm3). In contrast to other methods (such as HPLC analysis) FCS has no physical separation process; instead, it achieves its spatial resolution through its optics. Furthermore, FCS enables observation of fluorescence-tagged molecules in the biochemical pathway in intact living cells. This opens a new area, ""in situ or in vivo biochemistry"": tracing the biochemical pathway in intact cells and organs.Commonly, FCS is employed in the context of optical microscopy, in particular Confocal microscopy or two-photon excitation microscopy. In these techniques light is focused on a sample and the measured fluorescence intensity fluctuations (due to diffusion, physical or chemical reactions, aggregation, etc.) are analyzed using the temporal autocorrelation. Because the measured property is essentially related to the magnitude and/or the amount of fluctuations, there is an optimum measurement regime at the level when individual species enter or exit the observation volume (or turn on and off in the volume). When too many entities are measured at the same time the overall fluctuations are small in comparison to the total signal and may not be resolvable – in the other direction, if the individual fluctuation-events are too sparse in time, one measurement may take prohibitively too long. FCS is in a way the fluorescent counterpart to dynamic light scattering, which uses coherent light scattering, instead of (incoherent) fluorescence.When an appropriate model is known, FCS can be used to obtain quantitative information such as diffusion coefficients hydrodynamic radii average concentrations kinetic chemical reaction rates singlet-triplet dynamicsBecause fluorescent markers come in a variety of colors and can be specifically bound to a particular molecule (e.g. proteins, polymers, metal-complexes, etc.), it is possible to study the behavior of individual molecules (in rapid succession in composite solutions). With the development of sensitive detectors such as avalanche photodiodes the detection of the fluorescence signal coming from individual molecules in highly dilute samples has become practical. With this emerged the possibility to conduct FCS experiments in a wide variety of specimens, ranging from materials science to biology. The advent of engineered cells with genetically tagged proteins (like green fluorescent protein) has made FCS a common tool for studying molecular dynamics in living cells.