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Using Camera Events in Third-party Applications
This application note lists some of the third-party software applications, commonly used with Point Grey’s GigE Vision and USB3 Vision cameras, which implement events. It also provides an image of the event configuration screen for the different software programs.
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Using Counter and Timer Control
This document provides an overview of the Counter and Timer Control feature in the Blackfly S and Oryx cameras.
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Electrophysiology and Calcium Imaging
The Department of Human Physiology was established in 1974 as the first department in the School of Medicine at Flinders University. The department has a research focus in neurosciencein three major areas; sensory and autonomic neurobiology, roles of neurotrophic factors and neurodegenerative diseases.
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Live Cell Imaging, Membrane Dynamics
The ability to perceive external stimuli and respond accordingly is a fundamental characteristic of biological systems. The stimuli are then converted to signals that can be read by cells via the process of signal transduction, of which there are many different kinds.
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Optimizing Detection in Whole Animal In vivo Imaging
Animal studies contribute significantly to our understanding of human disease, and function as an established and essential step in the development of treatments and other therapeutic agents. These studies are conducted in the preclinical phase, preceding drug screening in human clinical trials.
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Achieving a True Global Shutter with Large Format, Back-Illuminated CMOS
CMOS sensor technology has steadily improved over the last decade, and is now the standard for many applications such as security, machine vision, and handheld imaging systems.
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Is There Really a Cool Gas in the Middle of the Sun?
Yes, if you ask a team of researchers from University Hawaii, Institute for Astronomy who returned from an expedition to the blistering Sahara desert, where they found an unexpected source of cool gas-in the outer regions of the Sun.
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Characterization of Soil-Grown Root Systems
Recently, a team of scientists working in North America and Europe developed an innovative growth and imaging platform, known as GLO-Roots, that allows root architecture and gene expression to be studied in soil-grown plants.GLO-Roots (Growth and Luminescence Observatory for Roots; U.S. patent application: 13/970,960) is a collaborative effort between the labs of Dr. José Dinneny at the Carnegie Institution for Science (Stanford, California), Dr. Rubén Réllan-Álvarez (Langebio, Mexico), and Dr. Guillaume Lobet at the Université de Liège in Belgium.
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COSMOS for Ground-Based Time Domain Astronomy
Time domain astronomy is the study of how astronomical objects and unique events vary over time. It provides an alternative method to understanding the extreme phases of galaxy and stellar evolution, through the investigation of events such as supernovae, and gamma-ray bursts.
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In Vivo Fluorescence Imaging in the NIR-II Spectral Region for Early Cancer Detection
UV, VIS, and NIR-I detection methods have been used in various scientific and medical applications for decades. Each of these approaches, however, has its limitations.
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Ultrafast ICCD Cameras Enable Three-Pulse Ballistic Imaging Technique
Although the use of sprays for industrial processes such as material deposition, cutting, and mixing is widespread, the design and testing of most spray devices is still predominantly phenomenological, owing not only to limitations in computing power but to gaps in the fundamental understanding of the multiphase fluid phenomena that drive spray breakup and morphology 1,2.
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NIR-II Probes for In vivo Imaging
Optical fluorescence imaging is one of the most common techniques for imaging in vivo, due to its high temporal and spatial resolution [1]. As it is a non-invasive, real-time technique it is an attractive imaging modality for medical applications such as cancer diagnostics, biosensing, and medical testing.