422 results

01 December 2020

PhD student Rick Waasdorp winner of the Philips Graduation Prize Technology for Healthcare Solutions from the KHMW

PhD student Rick Waasdorp winner of the Philips Graduation Prize Technology for Healthcare Solutions from the KHMW

A ten for his graduation research, voted 'best graduate' of the 3mE faculty of TU Delft and winner of the Philips Graduation Prize Technology for Healthcare Solutions from the KHMW. The world of science lies at the feet of research talent Rick Waasdorp. He opted for a PhD Medical Imaging at ImPhys for the scientific program Medical Delta UltraHB, under the supervision of Dr. David Maresca.

01 December 2020

Alina Kuliesh joined ImPhys as a PhD student

Alina Kuliesh joined ImPhys as a PhD student

Alina will apply AI-technology to ultrasound imaging to unravel fundamental challenges in quantitative bioimaging applications. Her supervisor is David Maresca.

01 December 2020

Xiufeng Li joined ImPhys as a Postdoc

Xiufeng Li joined ImPhys as a Postdoc

Xiufeng will work on smart sensing systems and biomedical sensors. His supervisors are Nico de Jong and Martin Verweij.

01 December 2020

Researchers peer deep inside tissue

Researchers peer deep inside tissue

One of the challenges in optical imaging is imaging the inside of tissue in high resolution. Traditional methods allow us to look to a depth of approximately one millimetre. Researchers at Delft University of Technology have now developed a new method that can penetrate up to four times as deep: up to around four millimetres. The healthcare sector in particular may benefit from the new technique in the future.

26 November 2020

From imaging to analysing: how Delmic’s new FAST-EM system is changing electron microscopy

From imaging to analysing: how Delmic’s new FAST-EM system is changing electron microscopy

Delmic is launching an automated ultra-fast system, FAST-EM, which uses 64 electron beams. Reliable and extremely fast, FAST-EM is aimed at imaging biological samples without the need to constantly babysit the machine.

10 November 2020

Malavika Manju Sudheer joined ImPhys as a PhD student

Malavika Manju Sudheer joined ImPhys as a PhD student

Malavika Manju Sudheer will be working on the project SYNOPTICS. This project aims to use all the properties of light; Amplitude, Phase, Polarisation and Wavelength to achieve ultimate performance in imaging and sensing device applications. Her supervisor is Silvania Pereira.

09 November 2020

An all-time high for far-infrared space exploration

An all-time high for far-infrared space exploration

Next year, a helium balloon the size of a soccer stadium will bring a NASA telescope to the edge of space. This project is called GUSTO, and it will help scientists understand galactic evolution by probing interstellar gas. Its most important payload are three detectors developed by Jian Rong Gao and his teams at TU Delft and SRON, without which the telescope would be blind as to its mission purpose.

04 November 2020

ImPhys PhD student Rick Waasdorp best Graduate of the Faculty of 3mE

ImPhys PhD student Rick Waasdorp best Graduate of the Faculty of 3mE

We know that the brain sends a muscle a message before it moves. But we are not entirely sure what happens next. Rick Waasdorp has come up with a swift, non-invasive technique for looking at exactly this. It is perfect for further research into muscular dystrophy.

04 November 2020

ImPhys MSc student Teun Huijben best Graduate of the Faculty of Applied Sciences

ImPhys MSc student Teun Huijben best Graduate of the Faculty of Applied Sciences

Seeing tiny particles even better through a microscope – student Teun Huijben managed it for his Master’s thesis. As well as a top mark, the breakthrough has also earned him the title Best Graduate of the Faculty of Applied Sciences.

29 October 2020

Research Jeroen Kalkman on Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earing in TU Delft stories

Research Jeroen Kalkman on Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earing in TU Delft stories

In 2018, Johannes Vermeer’s world-famous Girl with a Pearl Earring underwent a total ‘body scan’: using state-of-the-art techniques, the painting was studied in painstaking detail from top to bottom. It provided a wealth of new insights about the painting and the painter. Four TU Delft faculties worked on the project.

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