Laura Innes Laura Innes Graduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt Graduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt Powell Powell Prof. Zuzanna Siwy Prof. Zuzanna Siwy Department of Physics and Astronomy Department of Physics and Astronomy University of California, Irvine University of California, Irvine Looking at Single Looking at Single Molecules with Nanopores Molecules with Nanopores
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Laura Innes Graduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt Powell Prof. Zuzanna Siwy
Looking at Single Molecules with Nanopores. Laura Innes Graduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt Powell Prof. Zuzanna Siwy Department of Physics and Astronomy University of California, Irvine. Why are Nanopores Interesting?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Laura InnesLaura InnesGraduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt PowellGraduate Students: Eric Kalman, Matt Powell
Prof. Zuzanna SiwyProf. Zuzanna Siwy
Department of Physics and AstronomyDepartment of Physics and AstronomyUniversity of California, IrvineUniversity of California, Irvine
Looking at Single Molecules Looking at Single Molecules with Nanoporeswith Nanopores
Why are Nanopores Interesting?Why are Nanopores Interesting?
Biological channels are the basis of many physiological processes e.g. heart and muscle function and ‘wiring’ information from the brain to all the cells.
Nanopores are the basis for biosensors detecting single molecules