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Take any combination of the following features: supramolecular
structures with a specific fluorescent probe localized as you would
like; nanoscale spatial reso- tion; tailor-made molecular and/or
solid-state fluorescing nanostructures; us- friendly and/or high-
throughput fluorescence techniques; the ability to do wh- ever you
wish with just one single (supra)molecule; utilization of
non-linear optical processes; and,last but not least,physical
understanding of the processes resu- ing in a (biological)
functionality at the single molecule level. What you will then have
is some recent progress in physics,chemistry,and the life sciences
leading to the development of a new tool for research and
application. This was amply demonstrated at the 8th Conference on
Methods and Applications of Fluorescence: Probes,Imaging,and
Spectroscopy held in Prague,the Czech Republic on August 24th-28th,
2003. This formed a crossroad of ideas from a variety of natural
science and technical research fields and biomedical applications
in particular. This volume - the third book in the Springer-Verlag
Series on Fluorescence - reviews some of the most characteristic
topics of the multidisciplinary area of fluorescence applications
in life sciences either presendted directly at th 8th MAF
Conference or considered to be a cruical development in the field.
In the initial contribution in Part 1 - Basics and Advanced
Approaches,the - itors explain the basics of fluorescence and
illustrate the relationship between some modern fluorescence
techniques and classical approaches. The second contrigution by B.
Take any combination of the following features: supramolecular
structures with a specific fluorescent probe localized as you would
like; nanoscale spatial reso- tion; tailor-made molecular and/or
solid-state fluorescing nanostructures; us- friendly and/or high-
throughput fluorescence techniques; the ability to do wh- ever you
wish with just one single (supra)molecule; utilization of
non-linear optical processes; and, last but not least, physical
understanding of the processes resu- ing in a (biological)
functionality at the single molecule level. What you will then have
is some recent progress in physics, chemistry, and the life
sciences leading to the development of a new tool for research and
application. This was amply demonstrated at the 8th Conference on
Methods and Applications of Fluorescence: Probes, Imaging, and
Spectroscopy held in Prague, the Czech Republic on August
24th-28th, 2003. This formed a crossroad of ideas from a variety of
natural science and technical research fields and biomedical
applications in particular. This volume - the third book in the
Springer-Verlag Series on Fluorescence - reviews some of the most
characteristic topics of the multidisciplinary area of fluorescence
applications in life sciences either presendted directly at th 8th
MAF Conference or considered to be a cruical development in the
field. In the initial contribution in Part 1 - Basics and Advanced
Approaches, the - itors explain the basics of fluorescence and
illustrate the relationship between some modern fluorescence
techniques and classical approaches. The second contriguti
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