421 results

18 September 2024

Stefan Witte joins Imaging Physics as professor

Stefan Witte joins Imaging Physics as professor

Delft University of Technology's Executive Board has appointed Stefan Witte as professor of Optics for nanoscale metrology in the Imaging Physics department of the Faculty of Applied Sciences as of September 2024. Thanks to the TU Delft Excellence Fund, Stefan Witte can get off to a flying start with his new research group and expects to obtain the first research results soon.

27 August 2024

Vincent den Ronden joined ImPhys as MSc student

Vincent den Ronden joined ImPhys as MSc student

Vincent den Ronden joined ImPhys as a MSc student. He will work on measuring the scattering of polarized light to obtain additional tissue information. Vincent will be supervised by Miriam Menzel.

23 August 2024

Take-off grant for Guillaume Renaud

Take-off grant for Guillaume Renaud

Guillaume Renaud received a NWO take-off grant for his project: "Quantitative ultrasound imaging inside bones".  With this safe, portable and affordable technology, he wish to improve patient comfort, as well as the efficiency and quality of the management of bone and joint diseases.

11 July 2024

Unique doctoral ceremony featuring identical triplets

Unique doctoral ceremony featuring identical triplets

“Identical triplets are very rare. It happens once in 200 million births. Brazil has a population of only 180 million, so Djalma, who was born in Brazil, is the only triplet in Brazil. And he is probably the only triplet in the world with a PhD, who knows”, said Professor Nico de Jong on Djalma Simões dos Santos’ groundbreaking doctorate at TU Delft on Friday 28 June 2024.

24 June 2024

Interview with Professor Emeritus Joseph Braat from the Optics Research group

Interview with Professor Emeritus Joseph Braat from the Optics Research group

In-depth interview with prof. em. Joseph Braat about his role in optical storage (lead to invention of the CD), the early stages of lithography for chips fabrication and more.

07 June 2024

Funding for Cardiac patch for flexible ultrasound imaging

Funding for Cardiac patch for flexible ultrasound imaging

Martin Verweij received funding from NWO for his project: "Cardiac patch for flexible ultrasound imaging". The project is in collaboration with ErasmusMC Rotterdam. Six application-oriented research projects received funding through the Open Technology Programme from the NWO Domain Applied and Engineering Sciences.

05 June 2024

The mysterious microscope from Jena

The mysterious microscope from Jena

In the back of a cupboard at the Imaging Physics department of the Faculty of Applied Sciences (TNW) at TU Delft, a box full of interesting objects had hiding for almost thirty years. Nestled amongst prisms and scopes, was a mysterious microscope.

17 May 2024

Jacob Hoogenboom appointed as professor

Jacob Hoogenboom appointed as professor

TU Delft's Executive Board has appointed Jacob Hoogenboom as Professor of Electron and Light Microscopy in the Department of Imaging Physics at the Faculty of Applied Sciences.

23 April 2024

AiNed XS Europa grant for Qian Tao

AiNed XS Europa grant for Qian Tao

Qian Tao has been rewarded with an AiNed XS Europa grant for her project: Physics-informed generative medical imaging: An AI-for-AI solution to fair data

19 April 2024

Problem in microscopy solved after decades

Problem in microscopy solved after decades

Examining tissues, cells, and proteins under a microscope helps us prevent and combat diseases. To study this, we need to precisely determine the dimensions of the biological structure. However, a biological sample may appear flatter under the light microscope than it actually is. Researchers at Delft University of Technology have now demonstrated for the first time that this distortion is not constant, contrary to what many scientists have assumed for decades. The breakthrough, published in Optica, confirms a prediction by Nobel laureate Stefan Hell from the 90s. With an online calculation tool and software, every researcher can now determine the correct depth of a biological sample.

Agenda

Stay connected

This content is being blocked for you because it contains cookies. Would you like to view this content? By clicking here, you will automatically allow the use of cookies.