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Dark matter is more than five times as abundant as all the visible matter in the universe. So why can't we see any of it?
Two UT Austin physicists were part of a collaboration that won the Breakthrough Prize for work at the Large Hadron Collider.
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Enda McGinley analyses the Big Four as he sees it in this year's All-Ireland SFC hunt - Kerry, Galway, Donegal and Armagh ...
The research team, led by Professor Stefan Mathias from Göttingen’s Faculty of Physics, has developed a cutting-edge method called “Ultrafast Dark-field Momentum Microscopy.” This technique allows ...
In the current study, the team has now developed a new technique known as "Ultrafast Dark-field Momentum Microscopy," and used it for the first time. This enabled them to show how dark excitons ...
More information: Çağatay Işıl et al, Virtual Gram staining of label-free bacteria using dark-field microscopy and deep learning, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ads2757 ...
The research team used nanoparticle probe, high-resolution microscopy, and Fourier transform algorithm technologies to develop "Fourier transform-based plasmonic dark-field microscopy" (FT-pdf ...
"For the first time, a practical method for dark-field imaging is available that can be easily implemented in an X-ray microscope," says Greving, who is leading the X-ray microscopy team at the ...
Dark field microscopy is a technique where only light that is scattered by the sample is collected. This is achieved by adding apertures that block the illuminating light from being imaged directly, ...