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Strong background in scanning/transmission electron microscopy (S/TEM), particularly atomic-resolution imaging and spectroscopy techniques (EELS/EDS) Proficiency in programming languages such as Python, C
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and atomic-level assembly of cell walls, extracellular structures, and are constructing blueprints of how bacteria use these building blocks to engineer organized and dynamic architectures. We
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Nanophysics group has an intense activity on the use of atomic force microscopy techniques to probe and map functionalities at the nanoscale, with a particular emphasis on piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM
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or theoretical simulations Characterization of the magnetic modes in iron oxide nanoparticles using neutron spectroscopy Synthesis and physicochemical characterization of iron and metal oxide nanoparticles
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resides in the Functional Atomic Force Microscopy (FAFM) group in the Nanomaterials Characterization Section, Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (CNMS), Physical Science Directorate (PSD) at Oak Ridge
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Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt am Main | Frankfurt am Main, Hessen | Germany | about 3 hours ago
circuitry of the vertebrate brain gives rise to the computational algorithms that animals use to solve real-world behavioral problems. We study this question in the larval zebrafish, where we can combine
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) are interested in molecular organisation of cell interfaces in the epithelial tissue and glycobiology. We use super-resolution STED microscopy, CryoET, in combination with biophysics and chemical biology, to
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the long-standing and counterintuitive observation of attraction between similarly charged particles in solution. In a series of papers we described the mechanism behind an “electrosolvation force” that can
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of attraction between similarly charged particles in solution. In a series of papers we described the mechanism behind an “electrosolvation force” that can drive such an attraction (J Chem Phys 2020, Langmuir
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-oncology and early detection research. Your position will be embedded in the CCC’s Advanced Microscopy Development Group, led by Dr Simon Poland and based in the purpose-built laser and microscopy