Synergy Between Biology And Physics Drives Cell-imaging Technology - ScienceDaily (June 5, 2008) — Developing techniques to image the complex biological systems found at the sub-cellular level has traditionally been hampered by divisions between the academic fields of biology and physics. However, a new interdisciplinary zeal has seen a number of exciting advances in super-resolution imaging technologies. See also: Plants & Animals Biology Developmental Biology Cell Biology Matter & Energy Medical Technology Optics Biochemistry Reference Confocal laser scanning microscopy Scanning tunneling microscope Biophysics Electron microscope In the June issue of Physics World, Paul O'Shea, a biophysicist at the University of Nottingham, Michael Somekh, an optical engineer at Nottingham's Institute of Biophysics, Imaging & Optical Science, and William Barnes, professor of photonics at the University of Exeter, outline these new techniques and explore why their development is an endeavour that requires the best efforts of both biologists and physicists. The tradi....
The New Newton: Unpublished Papers Reveal Lesser-known, But Significan.. - ScienceDaily (Sep. 18, 2006) — Known primarily for his foundational work in math and physics, Sir Isaac Newton actually spent more time on research in alchemy, as well as its interrelationships with science, history and religion, and its implications for economics. See also: Matter & Energy Physics Quantum Physics Thermodynamics Materials Science Engineering Chemistry Reference Newton's cradle Isaac Newton Gravitation Momentum Alchemy, as Newton practiced it in the 17th and 18th centuries, was research into the nature of chemical substances and processes – primarily the transmutation of materials from one type of matter to another. Newton and others conducted experiments, but also incorporated philosophical thought in their attempts to uncover the mysteries of the physical universe. 'Newton's extensive work on universal history (which presents human history as a coherent unit governed by certain immutable principles) provides an essential setting for linking his work on alchemy and....
The New Newton: Unpublished Papers Reveal Lesser-known, But Significan.. - ScienceDaily (Sep. 18, 2006) — Known primarily for his foundational work in math and physics, Sir Isaac Newton actually spent more time on research in alchemy, as well as its interrelationships with science, history and religion, and its implications for economics. See also: Matter & Energy Physics Quantum Physics Thermodynamics Materials Science Engineering Chemistry Reference Newton's cradle Isaac Newton Gravitation Momentum Alchemy, as Newton practiced it in the 17th and 18th centuries, was research into the nature of chemical substances and processes – primarily the transmutation of materials from one type of matter to another. Newton and others conducted experiments, but also incorporated philosophical thought in their attempts to uncover the mysteries of the physical universe. 'Newton's extensive work on universal history (which presents human history as a coherent unit governed by certain immutable principles) provides an essential setting for linking his work on alchemy and....
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