Results 261 to 270 of about 1,862,039 (280)
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Electron microscopy at the limits
Nature, 1981Experimental High-resolution Electron Microscopy. By J.C.H. Spence. Pp.420. ISBN 0-19-851365-8. (Clarendon/Oxford University Press: 1981.) £35, $74.
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Diagnostic Electron Microscopy
2002In 1986 Ernst Ruska was awarded with the Nobel Prize in Physics for his pioneering work in the development of the electron microscope. The electron microscope, with its power of resolution, opened up the smaller new world of biology. Its diagnostic utility in anatomic pathology was contested by advanced immunohistochemical and molecular genetic ...
Moonahm Yum, Michael P. Goheen
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Electron Microscopy of Viruses
2010Electron microscopy is widely used in virology because viruses are generally too small for a direct inspection by light microscopy. Analysis of virus morphology is necessary in many circumstances, e.g., for the diagnosis of a virus in particular clinical situations or the analysis of virus entry and assembly. Moreover, quality control of virus particle
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Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association (Practical Pharmacy ed.), 1945
V K, ZWORYKIN, J, HILLIER
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V K, ZWORYKIN, J, HILLIER
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Bacteriophage Electron Microscopy
2012Since the advent of the electron microscope approximately 70 years ago, bacterial viruses and electron microscopy are inextricably linked. Electron microscopy proved that bacteriophages are particulate and viral in nature, are complex in size and shape, and have intracellular development cycles and assembly pathways.
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