JEOL USA Blog

ACS Fall 2023 In Review

ACS Fall 2023 In Review

JEOL joined a host of scientists flocking to the Bay Area August 13 – 17, 2023 to attend ACS Fall 2023: Harnessing the Power of Data. Learn about our Analytical Chemistry and Energy and Fuels activities!

Japan Academy Prize for Electron Microscopy

Japan Academy Prize for Electron Microscopy Goes to University of Tokyo Professor Yuichi Ikuhara and Professor Naoya Shibata

Awarded for development of State-of-the-Art Electron Microscopy and their contribution to Nano Interface Technology (Joint Research).

Microscopy Community Celebrates Wil Bigelow

Microscopy Community Celebrates Wil Bigelow

Friends of Prof. Wilbur (Wil) Bigelow, Professor Emeritus at University of Michigan and Fellow of the Microscopy Society of America, threw a surprise 100th birthday party for him at the University of Michigan’s Dept. of Materials Science & Engineering in Ann Arbor.

Erick Leyva Ramírez

Get to know JEOL de Mexico

For more than 30 years, the JEOL sales and service office in Mexico has been the resource for electron microscopes and microprobes, as well as NMR and Mass Spectrometers.

Carrying Out Nanostructural Analysis with Focused Ion Beams

Carrying out Nanostructural Analysis with Focused Ion Beams

Focused ion beam technologies are considered to be the newest field of electron microscopy, being used for nanostructural analysis. Read on.

COVID-19 Virus using correlative FESEM and Fluorescence Microscopy

COVID-19 Virus Using correlative FESEM and Fluorescence Microscopy

Professor Simon Watkins' lab at University of Pittsburgh, in collaboration with JEOL USA, has been developing novel ways to analyze biological structures in 3D, utilizing correlative FESEM and fluorescence microscopy. The paper “Correlative Fluorescence and Electron Microscopy in 3D – Scanning Electron Microscope Perspective” (Current Protocols in Cytrometry) describes how the ability to correlate fluorescence microscopy and electron microscopy data obtained on biological specimens bridges the resolution gap between the data obtained by these different imaging techniques.

Rhinoceros

Protecting Endangered Species – U.S. Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratory

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Forensic Lab in Ashland, Oregon is helping to stop the export and import of rhino horn. The only wildlife forensic lab of its kind in the world, their work is identifying illegal exports and imports of products made from endangered wildlife as well as protected natural resources. JEOL is proud to share this story about how the AccuTOF-DART mass spectrometer is used to accurately identify the presence of rhino horn, as well as any suspicious items that may be made from endangered species, including pangolin and rare woods.

Thomas G. Huber: November 18, 1936 - December 2, 2019

Thomas G. Huber: November 18, 1936 - December 2, 2019

Thomas G. Huber: November 18, 1936 - December 2, 2019

The Nano Nemo on the Water - Armin VahidMohammadi

Science And Art Combine For Winning SEM Images

Entitled “Nano Nemo on the Water,” entry was selected as the winner of the Grand Prize SEM Image category in JEOL’s image contest for 2017.

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