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Corralling Brownian motion.


If you think making a little kid sit still for a camera is hard, try it with a protein in a water droplet droplet

very small drop of fluid.


droplet nuclei
the finite particles of matter which are transmitted from animal to animal.
. Such tiny objects jitter A flicker or fluctuation in a transmission signal or display image. The term is used in several ways, but it always refers to some offset of time and space from the norm. For example, in a network transmission, jitter would be a bit arriving either ahead or behind a standard clock cycle  constantly from collisions with molecules of the water around them, and that activity quickly drives a protein molecule out of a typical microscope's view.

A new microscope system can compensate for those jitters jitters 'Butterflies' Psychology An episode of nervousness or anxiety that often precedes a public event; jitters is a type of performance anxiety which may affect actors in a stage production–stage fright or soloist musicians; it may respond to anxiolytics , known as Brownian motion. The system has held minuscule fluorescent objects in its view for seconds at a time. The newfound stability promises scientists a means to study important biological agents in their natural environment, report the gadget's inventors. "We can trap smaller objects than can be trapped by any other means--all the way down to individual proteins" claims Adam E. Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
 of Stanford University.

He and William E. Moerner, also of Stanford, built their jitter-correction system around a particle trap made of two glass slides. The researchers etched one slide with shallow, intersecting channels, each attached to an electrode. Fluids move through these channels in and out of a hair-width trapping region at the intersection. The scientists then mounted this transparent trap above the lens of an inverted inverted

reverse in position, direction or order.


inverted L block
a pattern of local filtration anesthesia commonly used in laparotomy in the ox.
 optical microscope equipped with a laser to excite the trap's contents.

When a fluorescent particle moves within the trap, the system immediately applies electric signals to fluid in the channels. The signals propel the fluid and drive the particle toward the center of the microscope's view.

Among the items that the team has trapped are viruses and nanocrystals. To confine yet-smaller protein molecules, however, the researchers had to add glycerol glycerol, glycerin, glycerine, or 1,2,3-propanetriol (prō`pāntrī'ŏl), CH2OHCHOHCH2OH, colorless, odorless, sweet-tasting, syrupy liquid.  to the water to make it more viscous. A new, faster-feedback version of the trap won't need the glycerol, Cohen says.--P.W.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:282
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