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− | <p>Upon being asked to find the number of bacteria in a given sample, the response from members of our iGEM team has invariably been a long sigh and a plea to the realms of the supernatural. That most human quality - laziness - and flaws in traditional techniques, which we will revisit below, have led to us designing a potential solution in the form of a Digital Inline Holographic Microscope (DIHM).</p> | + | <p>Upon being asked to find the number of bacteria in a given sample, the response from members of our iGEM team has invariably been a long sigh and a plea to the realms of the supernatural. That most human quality - laziness - and flaws in traditional techniques, which we will revisit below, have led to us designing a potential solution in the form of a Digital Inline Holographic Microscope (DIHM). To learn more about the challenges we aim to overcome and how the DIHM does so, click here: <button class="btn btn-lg"><a href="#">Learn more...</a></button></p> |
Revision as of 19:47, 2 September 2017
Making the QWACC
Introduction
Upon being asked to find the number of bacteria in a given sample, the response from members of our iGEM team has invariably been a long sigh and a plea to the realms of the supernatural. That most human quality - laziness - and flaws in traditional techniques, which we will revisit below, have led to us designing a potential solution in the form of a Digital Inline Holographic Microscope (DIHM). To learn more about the challenges we aim to overcome and how the DIHM does so, click here: