Congratulations to Eric Diebold for winning the UCLA Chancellors Postdoctoral Award. Eric won this award for his pioneering contribution to fluorescence microscopy and for the landmark demonstration of the worlds fastest fluorescent camera.
Our work about the high-throughput single-microparticle imaging flow analyzer has been published in PNAS online and covered in UCLA Newsroom and PNAS’s Highlights. The technology can take a picture of every single cell in a microfluidic channel with a record...
Nature photonics (January 2013): Stochastically driven nonlinear processes are responsible for spontaneous pattern formation and instabilities in numerous natural and artificial systems, including well-known examples such as sand ripples, cloud formations, water...
Nature photonics (January 2013): Dispersive Fourier transformation is an emerging measurement technique that overcomes the speed limitations of traditional optical instruments and enables fast continuous single-shot measurements in optical sensing, spectroscopy and...