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  2. Carl Zeiss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Zeiss

    Carl's father, Johann Gottfried August Zeiss (1785–1849) was born in Rastenberg, where his forefathers had worked as artisans for over 100 years.August moved with his parents to Buttstädt, a small regional capital north of Weimar, where he married Johanna Antoinette Friederike Schmith (1786–1856).

  3. Cell theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_theory

    Carl Zeiss, a German engineer who manufactured microscopes, began to make changes to the lenses used. But the optical quality did not improve until the 1880s when he hired Otto Schott and eventually Ernst Abbe. [5]

  4. August Köhler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Köhler

    August Karl Johann Valentin Köhler (4 March 1866 – 12 March 1948) was a German professor and early staff member of Carl Zeiss AG in Jena, Germany.He is best known for his development of the microscopy technique of Köhler illumination, an important principle in optimizing microscopic resolution power by evenly illuminating the field of view.

  5. Cytometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytometry

    Cytometers are the instruments which count the blood cells in the common blood test.. Cytometry is the measurement of number and characteristics of cells.Variables that can be measured by cytometric methods include cell size, cell count, cell morphology (shape and structure), cell cycle phase, DNA content, and the existence or absence of specific proteins on the cell surface or in the ...

  6. Laser capture microdissection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_capture_microdissection

    The first technology (used by Carl Zeiss PALM) cuts around the sample then collects it by a "catapulting" technology. The sample can be catapulted from a slide or special culture dish by a defocused U.V laser pulse which generates a photonic force to propel the material off the slide/dish, a technique sometimes called Laser Micro-dissection ...

  7. Optical Museum Jena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_Museum_Jena

    The historical Zeiss-Workshop was moved in 2002 from the Volkshaus to the Optical Museum. The Carl Zeiss Foundation, the Ernst Abbe Foundation, Carl Zeiss AG, the city of Jena and the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena joined forces to establish the Deutsches Optisches Museum Foundation on 9 September 2016.

  8. Cytochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytochemistry

    Freeze fracture enzyme cytochemistry was initially mentioned in the study of Pinto de silva in 1987. [3] It is a technique that allows the introduction of cytochemistry into a freeze fracture cell membrane. immunocytochemistry is used in this technique to label and visualize the cell membrane's molecules.

  9. Hertha Meyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hertha_Meyer

    Meyer was born in Germany. She studied a technical course in infectious diseases at the Lette-Verein training school in Berlin, completing the course in 1921. [1] She was denied higher education in the university due to antisemitic regulations and worked as a technician at the Robert Koch Institute (then called the Royal Prussian Institute for Infectious Diseases) in Berlin.