Multimedia Education and Courses in Nanotechnology
 
The "NANO-BIOTECHNOLOGY" Multimedia Encyclopedic Courses


Exploring Nano-Biotechnology, 4th volume of the Nanopolis™ encyclopedic series, reveals the influence of nanotechnology on:
  • clinical diagnosis and treatment,
  • analysis of biologically relevant processes at single molecule level,
  • the development of biosensors.
A special section dedicated to the research field of nanofluidics is also included.
 
 
Samples
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer from
"Methods for single molecule or intracellular analysis"
(view sample)
 
Nanotechnology for Drug Solubilization from
"Nanotechnology in clinical diagnosis"
(view sample)
 
Positron Emission Tomography from
"Nanotechnology in clinical diagnosis"
(view sample)
 
Participate to the Project
The Nanopolis editorial tool makes possible the creation, follow up, validation and publication of multimedia animations in the nano-bio-technology field. The scientific community is warmly invited to contact the Nanopolis team in order to get further information about our interactive process of publication. More
 
System requirements
- 128 MB RAM memory available required (256 MB RAM recommended)
- CD-ROM drive
- available USB port
- PC with Pentium processor 500 MHz or higher
- Microsoft Windows XP, 2000, NT or Mac OS X 10.3.9 and higher
- Flash Player MX or later for PC, 8 or later for Macintosh;
- SVGA graphics adapter; Quicktime V 4.1.2 or later
- CD-ROM format: Mac/PC (ISO 9660-Joliet) hybrid.

 

 
Reviewers' Impressions
“I think now it [the subject Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer] is very nice, including the animation for OS-FIA.”
Prof. Hiroshi Ueda Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology School of Engineering, University of Tokyo, Japan
“I must say that the webpage [the subject Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy] is looking great and especially the animations are nice to understand pronciples and concepts.”
Dr. Mark Hink Systemic Cell Biology, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology Dortmund, Germany
“This [the subject Nanotechnology Enabled Vaccines] is looking really good. What really made the chapter stronger was including the cationic microparticles as well as the nanorods.”
Dr. Aliasger Salem Division of Pharmaceutics, Chemical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering, College of Pharmacy and Engineering, University of Iowa, USA

 
         
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