Eric Betzig and Harald Hess (Janelia Farm/HHMI): Developing PALM Microscopy

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  • čas přidán 7. 01. 2011
  • www.ibiology.org/techniques/p...
    During their 20-year friendship, Betzig and Hess worked together and separately, in academia and industry, before eventually joining forces to develop the first super-high-resolution PALM microscope. They tell us the story of this journey and emphasize how their unusual and varied backgrounds provided the skills to complete the project.

Komentáře • 12

  • @MuratUenalan
    @MuratUenalan Před 4 lety +8

    So inspiring, and a Nobel prize really deserved.

  • @lostkingbobo
    @lostkingbobo Před 13 lety +13

    really touched by this video. They express the quality of being a great scientist and inventor.

  • @ytkevintan
    @ytkevintan Před rokem

    Thanks to Eric Betzig and Harald Hess's contribution to microcopy, I am sure many cellular discoveries were made , and will continue to be made. Inspiring further advancement of other microscopy technology. I am sure this has saved and will save many people's life from better understanding of cellular mechanism, and many more. A milestone in human advancement. An their story just shows how a few person can have a huge impact on human kind, and the precious part was they were doing something out of their love for science, not for the money.

  • @rubencastorena2591
    @rubencastorena2591 Před 4 lety +1

    This is so usefull to understand your paper , Than you very much!

  • @brad8596
    @brad8596 Před 3 lety +1

    fantastic video

  • @jimmyhart5155
    @jimmyhart5155 Před 3 lety +1

    These are true geniuses

  • @dylanlawless1
    @dylanlawless1 Před 13 lety +1

    Great video. I'm not sure why you don't have way more subscribers but I'l try pass on the name because you deserve much more viewers

  • @aatt3209
    @aatt3209 Před 3 lety +3

    Please some author write their inspiring stories down - for the benefits of inspiring current & future generations to take adventuresome journeys in life.

  • @paulsmc7041
    @paulsmc7041 Před 23 dny

    So, for the first pulse of light, some molecules light up. Then for the next pulse others light up, and so on. Two questions:
    1) Why don't they all light up for that first pulse?
    2) Why do they only light up once, and why is it always a new subset which light up?
    thanks.

  • @zpeeled
    @zpeeled Před 11 lety

    The commercial translation of some of this work can be found at vutara.com . Thank you for the video. Very cool!

  • @g0t0hellman
    @g0t0hellman Před 9 lety

    interesting that NPR chops this up and presents it as a new story: www.npr.org/2014/10/08/354639749/chemistry-nobel-given-to-scientists-for-work-on-optical-microscope

  • @lotharmayring6063
    @lotharmayring6063 Před 3 měsíci

    fluorescence allways stays blurry. the limiting factor ist wavelength. no technics can make that better. This microscopes are made to make money