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Scientists use X-rays to peer into a person's body, and a new X-ray imaging technique does the same for individual cells.
“You should be able to image most macromolecular assemblies inside the cell”, such as proteins and DNA, says Pierre Thibault, a physicist at the Paul Scherrer Institute in Villigen, Switzerland who leads the team that reports the new technique in the July 18 Science.
Electron microscopes can “see” details as small as 0.2 nanometers, but since electrons don’t penetrate far into most materials, only the surface gets imaged. X-rays penetrate materials much better, allowing the new technique to peer into objects tens of thousands of nanometers thick — about the size of most plant or animal cells.
"Our method should be easy to apply for 3-D imaging also," Thibault adds.
Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells
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How does that compare with Raman spectroscopy? edu@lipus.org Colorado Springs CO 719 473 8664
Heinz Gf. Matuschka
Jul. 20, 2008 at 11:38pm
