Albanova mini-workshop “Frontiers in Super-resolved fluorescence microscopy, what´s next?”
by
Hans Blom(KTH Applied physics), Jerker Widengren(KTH Applied physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
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Description
In the context of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, most welcome to the Albanova mini-workshop
“Frontiers in Super-resolved fluorescence microscopy, what´s next?”
We have gathered some world-leading experts in Super-resolved fluorescence microscopy, the topic of this year´s Nobel Prize in Chemistry, to give presentations within a mini-symposium “Frontiers in Super-resolved fluorescence microscopy, what´s next?”. Since the previous announcement, the list of speakers has been extended, and the program is now even more interesting:
9:15-9:45
Volker Westphal, Max-Planck Inst Biophys Chem, Göttingen
Recent Developments in Superresolution Microscopy
9:45-10:15
Mark Bates, Max-Planck Inst Biophys Chem, Göttingen
Fluorescence nanoscopy with stochastic switching and 4PI detection
10:15-10:45
Katrin Willig, Max-Planck Inst Biophys Chem, Göttingen
STED microscopy of the living mouse brain
10:45-11:15
Christian Eggeling, Oxford Univ
STED-FCS microscopy on cellular membranes
11:15- 11:45
Andriy Chmyrov, Max-Planck Inst Biophys Chem, Göttingen
Multi-color multi-doughnut RESOLFT nanoscopy of living cells
11:45-12:15
Johann Engelhart, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Key technologies for simplifying STED microscopy
Most welcome!
Jerker Widengren; KTH Applied Physics
Hans Blom, KTH, Applied Physics