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Curt Andrew Richter curt.richter@nist.gov 301.975.2082 Description Our research team is performing foundational experimental research to develop an improved understanding of the physics of the quantum
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continues to push patterning to new limits. There are significant needs to understand how the components in these resists are distributed, and critically whether there is aggregation that could contribute
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of expansion and the completeness of differentiation is important to both efficient manufacturing and to product safety. Time-lapse microscopy of living cells allows the quantification of changes in dynamic
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in this opportunity address the problem of why it is that measurements that use different measuring principles "orthogonal measurements" sometimes return vastly different results. Problems of interest
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for testing the components of these devices is to make physical contact to the devices using micro probes. This approach has three main limitations: (1) each time the probes are landed on a device, they damage
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levels. Health care applications include screening for disease or exposure to toxins. Headspace analysis is a powerful measurement tool to characterize partitioning between blood and breath. We seek
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. It is estimated that the majority (85%-99%) of genotypes detected in environmental samples represent microbial “dark matter” that cannot currently be cultured in modern microbiology laboratories
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For predicting thermochemistry of small main-group molecules, quantum chemistry is sufficiently reliable that it can be used to settle experimental disagreements and to provide critical data that are not available
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NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Isotope metallomics is the coupling of elemental and isotope geochemistry techniques with the health and medical sciences. In the last two
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Laboratory, Software and Systems Division opportunity location 50.77.51.B7872 Gaithersburg, MD NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Advisers name email phone Ram D. Sriram sriram@nist.gov