Working in collaboration with a top scientist in the States and making use of the university’s excellent design facilities to make some parts from scratch, Dr Neil Kad has built the so-called TIRF (Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence) microscope over the last eight months. He even managed to buy one part for it on EBAY for £5 that would have cost £1000 new.
The microscope enables scientists and researchers to examine cells millions of times more closely and more clearly than a standard microscope, and is already being used extensively in areas such as forensics and pharmacology.
Using funding from the university and from the Royal Society, Neil managed to build the microscope from scratch at a cost of just £40,000. It would have cost over £200,000 to buy it new. “It has been a real labour of love,” he explained, “but now it’s ready to be unveiled and to be put to use here at the university and that’s fantastic not just for me, but many of my colleagues who can now be trained to use the microscope and will be able to use it for their research.”
Praising Neil’s initiative and resourcefulness, Professor Nelson Fernandez from the Department of Biological Sciences said: “The introduction of a TIRF-equipped microscope to the cell bio-imaging facility opens new possibilities for novel applications, for example, for studying how DNA repair occurs in real-time.”
Neil Kad’s and his American collaborator on the project, Bennett van Houten, from the University of Pittsburgh, will officially unveil the microscope later this month to a panel of specially-invited guests.
Christine Garrington | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.essex.ac.uk
Further Reports about: DIY > DIY microscope > high-tech microscope > TIRF > Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence
More articles from
Medical Engineering:
The first portable system for measuring the damage to hearing in cetaceans
30.12.2008 | Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
EU’s threat to MRI scanners still looms large
17.12.2008 | Institute of Physics
08.01.2009 | Information Technology
Polarized light pollution leads animals astray
08.01.2009 | Ecology, The Environment and Conservation
HWI scientist first in world to unravel structure of key breast cancer target enzyme
08.01.2009 | Life Sciences
Annual Congress European Association of Urology: highlights in Stockholm
18.12.2008 | Event News
PRACE hosts First Scientific Conference
16.12.2008 | Event News
USM Conference Explores Issues And Challenges In The Global Construction Sector
10.12.2008 | Event News