New STED Tools for Gentle Live Imaging at Nanoscale Resolution
In this edition of our 1-2-3 newsletter...
Explore the tools and tech at the frontier of live cell imaging, including using fluorescence lifetime data for multiplex imaging of different markers at nanoscale resolution.
And read about how grasshoppers helped explain the concept of heredity.
1. New TauSTED Tools for Gentle Live Imaging at Nanoscale Resolution
Capture the dynamics of subcellular species in their native context with the latest tools for multiplex STED (Stimulated Emission Depletion) imaging of living specimens at nanoscale resolution.
In this live webinar, you will learn:
Live on Wednesday, April 17, 2024.
2. What Gets You up in the Morning to Do Science? Why Knowing The Reason Matters
Why do you do science? Is it your passion, is it to make an impact, is it just the way you make your living, or something else?
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In The Happy Scientist Live, we explore how knowing your reasons and motivation for doing science impacts your decision-making and how to harness that to become a better scientist and more employable.
Live on Monday, April 8th, 2024.
3. Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy Explained In 3 Easy Steps
Learn the basic principles of confocal laser scanning microscopy, how the microscopes work, and their applications in bioscience and beyond in this episode of Mentors At Your Benchside.
Celebrating Walter Sutton.
April 5, 1877, was the birthday of Walter Sutton, who was the first to discover that Mendelian laws of inheritance (that guy with those peas) applied at the cellular level via chromosomes, tying genetics, chromosomes, and heredity together.
He made these observations by studying grasshoppers common on farms in his home state of Kansas.
-Thomas Warwick, Content Creator, Bitesize Bio