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Microscopy by Feel

Event Type
Lecture
Sponsor
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
Location
301 North Neil, Suite 201, Champaign, IL 61820
Date
Dec 12, 2024   1:30 - 3:00 pm  
Speaker
Kathy Walsh
Cost
free
Registration
Registration
Contact
Kathryn Williams
E-Mail
olli@illinois.edu
Phone
217-244-9141
Views
12
Originating Calendar
Campus General Request Event

OLLI at Illinois (301 N. Neil, Champaign) is offering this lecture as part of "A Taste of OLLI".The most familiar form of optical microscopy uses visible light reflected from an object’s surface to obtain an image of that object. To measure features on an object’s surface which are smaller than visible light can see, other forms of observation must be employed. Atomic force microscopy is an imaging technique that relies on feel, not on photons. Gently tracing the surface with a sharp probe (which is about a thousand times smaller than a record player stylus) allows this technique to measure surface textures on the scale of nanometers and to build up nanoscale 3D images of surfaces.

Lecturer: Kathy Walsh spent time in several fields of physics before focusing on microscopy as a career. She received her Ph.D. from Michigan State University in 2013 (Scanning Probe Microscopy of Protein Nanowires) and came to work at the University of Illinois Materials Research Laboratory promptly thereafter. As a senior research scientist at the Materials Research Lab, she spends her days training researchers to use scientific instruments and helping them optimize their measurements. Her favorite thing to do with atomic force microscopy is to find out what ordinary, everyday objects look like on the nanoscale.

Lecturer:  Kathy Walsh spent time in several fields of physics before focusing on microscopy as a career.  She received her Ph.D. from Michigan State University in 2013 (Scanning Probe Microscopy of Protein Nanowires) and came to work at the University of Illinois Materials Research Laboratory promptly thereafter. As a senior research scientist at the Materials Research Lab, she spends her days training researchers to use scientific instruments and helping them optimize their measurements. Her favorite thing to do with atomic force microscopy is to find out what ordinary, everyday objects look like on the nanoscale.

This lecture is free and open to the public and will take place at the OLLI office and on Zoom. For further details and information about registration, please visit olli.illinois.edu or call 217-244-9141.This lecture is free and open to the public and will take place at the OLLI office and on Zoom.  For further details and information about registration, please visit olli.illinois.edu or call 217-244-9141.



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