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informatics developers in the public-private-academic Genome in a Bottle Consortium to develop methods to integrate short-, linked-, and long-read sequencing technologies to form benchmarks for somatic variant
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parallel, low-cost analysis systems that do not rely on optical or aptamer-based labels. Before such systems can be realized, the electromagnetic response of biochemical samples must be understood in detail
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. The research includes experimental measurements on industrially-pertinent materials using a range of advanced methods (various modes of transmission electron microscopy, x-ray/neutron scattering, x-ray
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ionization sources that allow for single-drop analysis with minimal competitive ionization and maximal analyte intensity is of major interest. Additionally, creation of statistical treatment methods
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quantum computing. Their dimensions range from a few to several hundred nanometers. There is special interest in color centers in nanodiamonds, which give them unique photonic and spin characteristics
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Poppendieck dustin.poppendieck@nist.gov 301.975.8423 Description This program is designed to provide the measurement science to support the development of industry-consensus standards and guides related
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has an active effort in the development of electron microscopy methods for high spatial resolution materials characterization and has recently upgraded its aberration-corrected STEM with a high-speed
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301.975.6050 Jan Obrzut jan.obrzut@nist.gov 301.975.6845 Description As part of a collaborative NIST-wide program involving structural characterization, modeling, and high-throughput microwave measurement, we
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processing of tables, extraction of property data from plots, analysis of paper content and extraction of metadata (substances, description of their samples, experimental methods, uncertainties, etc
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. New measurement methods and tools are required for biology to emerge fully as an enabling, practical platform for engineering. The Cellular