THE INSTITUTE
Talk

Optical Tweezers: Shedding Light on Life’s Molecules, One at a Time

Monday, April 08, 2019, 6:30PM

NYUAD Campus, Conference Center

Past Event

Open to the Public

Recent advances have led to the new field of single molecule biophysics. Single-molecule techniques record characteristics that are otherwise obscured by traditional approaches, revealing the behavior of individual biomolecules. Prominent among the new techniques is ‘optical tweezers,’ which uses radiation pressure from a laser to manipulate tiny objects, noninvasively, under the microscope. Dr. Arthur Ashkin (Bell Labs) received the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of optical tweezers, and for its biological applications. This talk highlights some of those biological applications, illustrating the power of this technology to help scientists understand the key molecules of life.

Recent advances have led to the new field of single molecule biophysics. Single-molecule techniques record characteristics that are otherwise obscured by traditional approaches, revealing the behavior of individual biomolecules. Prominent among the new techniques is ‘optical tweezers,’ which uses radiation pressure from a laser to manipulate tiny objects, noninvasively, under the microscope. Dr. Arthur Ashkin (Bell Labs) received the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention of optical tweezers, and for its biological applications. This talk highlights some of those biological applications, illustrating the power of this technology to help scientists understand the key molecules of life.

Speakers
  • Steven M. Block, The Stanford W. Ascherman, M.D., Professor and Professor of Applied Physics and of Biology, Stanford University
Hosted by
  • NYU Abu Dhabi Institute