Examples of using An electron microscope in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Someone with an electron microscope.
In addition it is sotiny that it can only be seen under an electron microscope.
Slow down. An electron microscope and also liquid nitrogen.
He petitioned the school to buy an electron microscope.
If I had an electron microscope and two weeks, maybe.
People also translate
But there is a way toexamine even the tiniest pollen grain with an electron microscope.
I mean, who's carrying around an electron microscope in their pocket?
An electron microscope image of the H1N1 influenza virus, taken at the CDC's Influenza Laboratory.
Filmed and actioned with an electron microscope, this is them opening and closing.
He's going to have to bounce light off of them, or he's going to have to bounce electrons, use an electron microscope.
Its capsid appears hexagonal under an electron microscope, therefore the capsid symmetry is icosahedral.
The coronavirus receives its name from the halo or crown(corona)that is seen when the virus is viewed by an electron microscope.
It has been suggested that an electron microscope could be used to read and interpret any patterns that were not fully overwritten by the process.
The ribosome is an entity so tiny that even with an electron microscope, it is hard to see it.
When seen under an electron microscope, they resemble balls of tangled thread and are dense foci of distribution for the protein coilin.
They are made up of DNA and four pairs of proteins called histones,and resemble"beads on a string of DNA" when observed with an electron microscope.
It's not like when Dr. Goldfarb claimed he bought an electron microscope and he was really just keeping a Russian girl in an apartment in Van Nuys.
If we really want to understand these fossils, what we need to do is notjust to look at the surface which we can do with an electron microscope.
If you have ever seen an electron microscope picture, you will see this. This all looks the same, then there's this bit over here which is incredibly complicated.
Ribosomes were first observed in the mid-1950s by Romanian-American cell biologistGeorge Emil Palade, using an electron microscope, as dense particles or granules.
In fact, without an electron microscope one doesn't see much of anything at all, as his solar energy nano-systems measure only several millionths of a millimeter.
Their work was inspired by a novel optical concept for thecorrection of spherical aberration of the objective lens of an electron microscope, developed by Harald Rose(born 1935, Germny).
Richard Henderson in 1990 was successful in using an electron microscope to generate a three-dimensional image of a protein at atomic resolution.
An electron microscope uses a controlled beam of electrons to illuminate a specimen and produce a magnified image. Two common types are the scanning electron microscope(SEM) and the transmission electron microscope(TEM).
But in 1990, Richard Henderson succeeded in using an electron microscope to generate a three-dimensional image of a protein at atomic resolution.
In 1974, Thomas Henry Flewett suggested the name rotavirus after observing that,when viewed through an electron microscope, a rotavirus particle looks like a wheel or“Rota” in Latin;
After examining a small cube of rat brain tissue under an electron microscope, the scientists created a 3D reconstruction of the centre of learning and memory, the hippocampus, along with connections among its neurons(brain cells).
In 1974, Thomas Henry Flewett suggested the name rotavirus after observing that,when viewed through an electron microscope, a rotavirus particle looks like a wheel(rota in Latin) the name was officially recognized by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses four years later.
It would be morefeasible to scan a dead brain using an electron microscope, but even that technology is nowhere near good enough- and requires killing the subject first.
In 1974, Thomas Henry Flewett suggested the name rotavirus after observing that,when viewed through an electron microscope, a rotavirus particle looks like a wheel(rota in Latin); the name was officially recognised by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses four years later.