Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

A wide-field view at single molecules and single particles

21 October 2011

PhD ceremony: Mr. F. Lusitani, 12.45 uur, Aula Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen

Dissertation: A wide-field view at single molecules and single particles

Promotor(s): prof. P.H.M. van Loosdrecht

Faculty: Mathematic and Natural Sciences

Optical microscopy is among the oldest techniques developed and implemented for modern science; the first microscope dating back to the end of the sixteenth century. Throughout 5 centuries, scientists have greatly benefitted from the remarkable possibilities offered by the observation of nature at small scales in a number of disciplines ranging from biology to medicine and from condensed matter physics to optics. The quest to increase sensitivity and resolution towards smaller and smaller scales, provoked by the demand to gain a much more detailed understanding of the microscopic world, has over the years led to a boost of the capabilities of microscopic techniques, which is continuing even today.

Five centuries of theoretical understanding and technological improvements have provided modern scientist the possibility to study matter at the single molecule level. The single molecule and single particle microscopy techniques developed in the last 20 years and subject of this dissertation, has extended the applications of optical microscopies to new fields such as nanotechnology and material science. Modern single molecule microscopy has provided, and still does, scientists with a powerful tool in the quest of investigating matter at the smallest length scales. How to achieve single molecule sensitivity, how the light behaves when emitted by a single molecule, and how the imaging process occurs are largely discussed in this dissertation together with a number of examples where the technique is applied to the investigation of diverse systems and conditions.

Last modified:13 March 2020 01.10 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 18 July 2024

    Smart robots to make smaller chips

    A robotic arm in a factory that repeatedly executes the same movement: that’s a thing of the past, states Ming Cao. Researchers of the University of Groningen are collaborating with high-tech companies to make production processes more autonomous.

  • 17 July 2024

    Veni-grants for ten researchers

    The Dutch Research Council (NWO) has awarded a Veni grant of up to €320,000 each to ten researchers of the University of Groningen and the UMCG. The Veni grants are designed for outstanding researchers who have recently gained a PhD.

  • 15 July 2024

    Funding for RUG researchers from National Growth Fund programme Circular Plastics NL

    For research on making plastics circular, Professors Patrizio Raffa and Katja Loos together receive about 1.2 million euros from the National Growth Fund programme Circular Plastics NL.