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Seminar

Betzig: Imaging Life at High Spatiotemporal Resolution

You are invited to the Monday seminar at Krasnow:

    TITLE: Imaging Life at High Spatiotemporal Resolution

    SPEAKER: Dr. Eric Betzig (Group Leader, Janelia Research Campus, HHMI)

    DATE: Monday, 23 March, 2015

    TIME: 4:00-5:00 pm (join us for refreshments at 3:30)

    LOCATION: Lecture Room (Room 229)
    Krasnow Institute Building
    George Mason University, Fairfax, VA

ABSTRACT:

As our understanding of biological systems as increased, so has the complexity of our questions and the need for more advanced optical tools to answer them. For example, there is a hundred-fold gap between the resolution of conventional optical microscopy and the scale at which molecules self-assemble to form sub-cellular structures. Furthermore, as we attempt to peer more closely at the dynamic complexity of living systems, the actinic glare of our microscopes can adversely influence the specimens we hope to study. Finally, the heterogeneity of living tissue can seriously impede our ability to image at high resolution, due to the resulting warping and scattering of light rays. I will describe three areas focused on addressing these challenges: super-resolution microscopy for imaging specific proteins within cells down to near-molecular resolution; plane illumination microscopy using non-diffracting beams for noninvasive imaging of three-dimensional dynamics within live cells and embryos; and adaptive optics to recover optimal images from within optically heterogeneous specimens.