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’ group, led by Prof Achilles Kapanidis. The group is well known for developing single-molecule and single-cell fluorescence methods (Uphoff PNAS 2013; Robb, Sci Reports 2019; Zagajewski, Nature Comm Biol
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We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Assistant for the Gene Machines’ group, led by Prof Achilles Kapanidis. The group is well known for developing single-molecule and single-cell fluorescence
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the approach to other inorganic materials. The student will gain experience in: Langmuir-Blodgett film deposition and vesicle preparation, fluorescence and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF
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, fluorescence, and electron microscopy) Supervision of dissertation projects (e.g., bachelor's and master's dissertations) The position provides the opportunity for academic qualification; tasks will be assigned
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responsibilities: Cell culture Bioink development Bioprinting of skeletal muscle tissue 3D printing of polymeric support structures Tissue characterization (e.g., immunostaining, fluorescence microscopy, live
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infrared and ultraviolet/visible spectroscopy, optical microscopy, and X-ray fluorescence as well as data science skills. A strong interest in art conservation and art history, in particular, Chinese
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aims to develop physics-informed artificial intelligence tools for single-molecule fluorescence microscopy. The PhD student will focus on designing AI-based methods for quantitative analysis of protein
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Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) | Cambridge, Massachusetts | United States | 2 months ago
techniques in structural biology including leading the integration of the HydraBio system for advanced in situ studies using fluorescence-guided targeting. Located within MIT.nano, the facility features
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at the University of Graz, Austria. About the Position: This role focuses on developing advanced single-molecule fluorescence and microfluidic approaches (confocal, TIRF, single-molecule FRET) for biophysics
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for scanning diffraction and fluorescence mapping experiments. Your role We are now looking for a temporary researcher with a background in (coherent) scanning probe-based x-ray techniques to join the NanoMAX