Press Releases & News

Lab Product News

APRIL 2012
Multi-Parametric Imaging for Stem Cell Research
Researchers use the Evolve EMCCD camera to develop a scalable and simple single camera, multi-parametric functional measurement system. Go to page 17 in the electronic edition of the magazine to learn more.

 
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FEBRUARY 2012
Microscopy Mixology - Integrating a hybrid of microscopic methods is a recipe for success in the research environment.
Photometrics strives to increase camera resolution and achieve faster speed as the need for imaging larger areas continues to prevail. This Cover Story tells all, read more in the online issue.
 


FEBRUARY 2012
Live From Photonics West 2012: An Introduction To OEM Imaging
Photonics Online interviews Deepak Sharma to learn more about the OEM Imaging, the OEM division of QImaging and Photometrics.
 


FEBRUARY 2012
Laboratory Equipment Names Photometrics a Finalist for its 2012 Reader's Choice Awards.
Now open for voting, the Evolve 128 EMCCD camera is a contender for this award. Winners will be featured in the March 2012 issue of Laboratory Equipment magazine.
 


JANUARY 2012
HIGH-SPEED IMAGING/ADVANCED MICROSCOPY/OPTOGENETICS: The technology behind the science: Exhibits deliver at Neuroscience 2011
Editor-in-Chief, Barabara Goode, showcases technologies presented at Neuroscience 2011 in Washington D.C. The Evolve 128 EMCCD was mentioned for its speed, that enabled two researchers to measure three parameters simultaneously.
 


JANUARY 2012
Digital Camera Technologies for Scientific Bio-Imaging. Part 4: Signal-to-Noise Ratio and Image Comparison of Cameras
In this article, the last in a four part series, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) comparisons begun in Part 3 are expanded with examples of existing cameras in low light and medium-to-high light scenarios. The optical system throughput calculations are combined with collection, conversion, and noise specifications from typical cameras available on the market to generate SNR values at different exposure times and under common user scenarios. Direct quantitative comparisons of image quality are made using SNR graphs and experimental images.
 
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NOVEMBER 2011
Chemists Reveal the Force Within You: New Method for Visualizing Mechanical Forces On Cell Surface
A new method for visualizing mechanical forces on the surface of a cell, reported in Nature Methods, provides the first detailed view of those forces, as they occur in real-time.
 
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NOVEMBER 2011
Visualizing mechanical tension across membrane receptors with a fluorescent sensor
This report focuses on a fluorescence-based turn-on sensor for mapping the mechanical strain exerted by specific cell-surface proteins in living cells. The sensor generates force maps with high spatial and temporal resolution using conventional fluorescence microscopy. The team demonstrates the approach by mapping mechanical forces during the early stages of regulatory endocytosis of the ligand-activated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR).
 


NOVEMBER 2011
Neuroscience 2011: Photometrics Evolve EMCCD Cameras
At Neuroscience 2011, M&A Editor Dr. Julian Heath talks to Rachit Mohindra, Associate Product Manager, about the Evolve EMCCD cameras from Photometrics.
 


SEPTEMBER 2011
Digital Camera Technologies for Scientific Bio-Imaging. Part 3: Noise and Signal-to-Noise Ratios
The focus of this article reviews noise parameters with an introduction and discussion of various noise sources. In this installment, the noise properties of different scientific cameras are combined with the photon throughput model developed in Part 2 (noted below) to generate signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) profiles for the three sensor types as a function of exposure time. The SNR of an image is a well-accepted metric of image quality and it is used in this discussion to allow quantitative comparison of the sensors.

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Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News

SEPTEMBER 2011
Imaging Live-Cell Response in Real Time
Understanding the molecular mechanisms behind how cells remodel in response to mechanical stimulation is essential to develop therapies for many vascular diseases. An ideal experiment would mechanically stimulate and image live cells in real time. However, the technical requirements of optical microscopy and mechanical stimulation techniques conflict. Learn how Andreea Trache, Ph.D., assistant professor at Texas A&M Health Science Center, solved this issue.
 
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AUGUST 2011
Virtual camera access method library launched
Photometrics has announced the release of the latest version of its Programmable Virtual Camera Access Method Library (PVCAM).
 
R and D Magazine

AUGUST 2011
Despite competition, the light microscope remains the most important instrument in the laboratory. And it's quickly evolving.
Quantitation arrives for light microscopy. Learn how Quant-View imaging, first developed for Photometrics' Evolve 512 EMCCD camera has improved quantitation, reproducibility, and certainty in data comparisons by moving away from arbitrary image intensities that vary from camera to camera and with different gain states, electron microscopy gains, and bit depths.
 
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JULY 2011
Powerful Fluorescence Tool Lights the Way to New Insights Into RNA of Living Cells
The ability to tag proteins with a green fluorescent light to watch how they behave inside cells so revolutionized the understanding of protein biology that it earned the scientific teams who developed the technique Nobel Prizes in 2008. Now, researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College have developed a similar fluorescent tool that can track the mysterious workings of the various forms of cellular RNA.
 
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JULY 2011
RNA Mimics of Green Fluorescent Protein
Discover how researchers can now genetically encode a fluorophore into RNA to track its expression. Learn how the team used the Photometrics CoolSNAP HQ2 to capture the images that support their research.

Read the supplemental information pertaining to this research
 


JUNE 2011
Digital Camera Technologies for Scientific Bio-Imaging. Part 2: Sampling and Signal
This Part 2 of a 4-part series begins by introducing the detection arm of a fluorescence imaging system and evaluating the standard pixel sizes of three sensor technologies with respect to resolution and sampling. Complementing the analysis is the methodology for calculating the number of photons that will be incident at each pixel of the sensor. Real experimental parameters, such as dye concentration, numerical aperture (NA) and magnification are all considered to determine this photon throughput.

Coming soon, Parts 3 and 4 of this series, radiometric throughput will be combined with an analysis of system noise to generate signal-to-noise profiles as a function of exposure time to help select which sensor would be best for a particular application.

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Lab News

JUNE 2011
Biomedical research - an image of the future
Scientist James R. Joubert discusses applications of integrated microscopy methods including live cell mechanical stimulation in relation to medical developments.

Read this article in the full issue of Laboratory News
Bioscience Technology

MAY 2011
How to Build an Integrated Microscopy system for Live Cell Mechanotransduction Studies
A new integrated microscopy system allows scientists to simultaneously stimulate and image live cell response in real-time.
Bioscience Technology

MAY 2011
Instruments & Systems: Camera Focus
The Evolve 128 EMCCD camera boasts features that provide researchers reduced noise and precise, accurate and highly quantitative measurement.
OptoIQ

MAY 2011
INSIDE INSTRUMENTATION: The many approaches and applications of biosensing
Read this article to learn how a Photometrics customer is using an EMCCD camera to explore how cells react to mechanical stimulation, such as the required expansion and contraction of blood vessels.
Drug Discovery & Development

MAY 2011
Capturing More in Microscopy Images
EMCCDs continue to possess optimal characteristics for high-sensitivity research. See how the Evolve with eXcelon technology is supporting life science research applications that require ultrafast frame rates with extraordinary sensitivity.
Microscopy & Analysis

MAY 2011
Digital Camera Technologies for Scientific Bio-Imaging. Part 1: The Sensors
This Part 1 of a four-part series covers the factors to consider in choosing a camera among CCD, EMCCD, and scientific-grade CMOS camera technologies for biological imaging applications. Part 1 focuses primarily on how each sensor works, imaging modes, pixel size, chip size and frame rate.

Request a copy of this article
Lab Product News

APRIL 2011
Imaging Live Cell Response in Real Time
Andreea Trache, Ph.D. at Texas A&M Health Science Center designed the first integrated system to use TIRF and fast spinning disk confocal microscopy. Her goal is to study protein dynamics in live cells in response to real-time mechanical stimulation by an atomic force microscope (AFM).

Go to pages 22-23 to learn how this ground breaking system incorporates the QuantEM EMCCD camera to support this important research and provide "the best synchronization between the spinning disk and the camera".

Access the full April issue of Lab Product News

Microscopy & Analysis

MARCH 2011
Photometrics in Texas
Dr. Andreea Trache has designed one of the first integrated microscopy systems that can simultaneously stimulate and image live-cell responses in real time.

Access the full March issue of Microscopy and Analysis Magazine
Bio Photonics

MARCH 2011
Confocal microscopy gets smaller and faster – and branches out
George McNamara, image core manager at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine, isn't talking about the importance of the four confocal instruments he manages. Instead, he's talking about tallying photons and the ability to obtain an accurate assessment of the number of fluorescing molecules in ever-decreasing spots in tissue samples. See how improvements in confocal microscopes and novel combinations with complementary microscopy techniques, such as super-resolution, are achieving this to create a fundamental change in the way research is conducted.
 
Bio Photonics

MARCH 2011
Small Animals, Big Achievements
A variety of preclinical imaging applications critically rely on small-animal imaging, with researchers monitoring, for example, changes in organs and tissue in response to physiological or environmental stimuli. Numerous modalities of these applications have been developed to address issues arising from the unique requirements of small-animal imaging. Here is a description of several such approaches to overcome previous limitations, including the use of cameras sensitive to further-penetrating near infrared dye emission and the development of 3D optoacoustic tomography.
 
Photonics Spectra

MARCH 2011
EMCCD vs. sCMOS for Microscopic Imaging
Here we investigate scientific-grade CMOS and EMCCD performance under low-light microscopy conditions by comparing signal-to-noise performance for the two under typical operating conditions. EMCCD sensors have the advantage over recently emerging scientific-grade CMOS sensors in low-light-microscopy imaging applications.

Access the full March issue of Photonics Spectra Magazine

 
Bio Photonics

SEPTEMBER 2010
Standardized Units for Reproducible Imaging Experiments
Reproducible quantitative measurement is a fundamental principle of science. Standardizing imaging data with the photoelectron captures a level of detail currently not seen to help researchers control and compare data for more meaningful conclusions.
 


JULY 2010
Fluorescence Imaging of Cranial Vasculature in Live Animals
M. Waleed Gaber, an associate professor at Baylor's College of Medicine and co-director of the small animal imaging facility at Texas Children's Hospital, is investigating factors that influence the health of vasculature surrounding CNS tumors to optimize efficacy and safety of anti-cancer therapies.
 
Bioscience Technology

JUNE 2010
Cover Story: Photometrics Evolve EMCCD Camera Makes 2010 Top Trends for Life Science Research
Evolve standardizes the unit of measurement for imaging data, allowing researchers to report live data in photoelectrons. This revolution is supporting scientists by making their research quantifiable and reproducible.
Vital Signs

SPRING 2010
Imaging for Cancer Research: Fluorescence Imaging of Cranial Vasculature in Live Animals (page 19)
Radiation therapy is one of the most successful treatments for malignant tumors yet there is still work to be done. Dr. Waleed Gaber, associate professor at Baylor's College of Medicine and his team have made a significant discovery and are progressing this area of research using Photometrics imaging solutions.
Fluorescence Imaging of Cranial Vasculature in Live Animals
OptoIQ

APRIL 2010
LOW-LIGHT IMAGING: Novel back-illuminated CCD enhances low-light-level detection
Conventional CCDs come in several forms, each with certain disadvantages for low-light imaging; a new take on back-illuminated technology resolves these issues while maintaining the benefits.
 
Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News

MARCH 2010
Integrating Cellular Imaging Data Effectively
Advances Allow Researchers to Compare Images Taken at Different Times and Settings
Evolve EMCCD Cameras Allow Researchers to Compare Images Taken at Different Times and Settings
Nature

MARCH 2010
Think Big, Work Small: Newest Microscopy Technologies
Evolve Camera makes the top of the list with its Photometrics-exclusive technology that measures imaging data in photoelectrons, an absolute and reproducible unit that makes experimental data quantitative and reproducible.

Think Big, Work Small: Newest Microscopy Technologies
OptoIQ

MARCH 2010
Measurement Standards/Super-Resolution Microscopy: Quantifying fluorescence
EMCCD technology, which revolutionized the life sciences by enabling visualization of low-light events, is quantitative. But EMCCD's standard unit of measure is variable. A non-arbitrary alternative promises better fluorescence microscopy - and better science.
Measurement Standards/Super-Resolution Microscopy: Quantifying fluorescence
Laurin Publishing

JANUARY 2010
Photonics Media Names Photometrics a Prism Award Finalist for Photonics Innovation for its Evolve Camera
View the interview with Rachit Mohindra, Photometrics’ Associate product Manager for the Evolve camera.

Photonics Media Names Photometrics a Prism Award Finalist for Photonics Innovation for its Evolve Camera
Laurin Publishing

SPIE

JANUARY 2010
Photometrics named top finalist in 2009 Prism Awards for Innovation sponsored by Photonics Media and SPIE

Photometrics named top finalist in 2009 Prism Awards for Innovation sponsored by Photonics Media and SPIE
Microscopy & Analysis

JANUARY 2010
Select Science Reports at ASCB: Novel Method for Quantifying Life Science Imaging

Select Science Reports at ASCB: Novel Method for Quantifying Life Science Imaging
Microscopy & Analysis

OCTOBER 2009
Advances in EMCCD Technology: Making Imaging Less Arbitrary

Advances in EMCCD Technology: Making Imaging Less Arbitrary
Nature

OCTOBER 2009
A Brave New Image
Advancing Fluorescence Imaging

The Evolve EMCCD camera from Photometrics is the first camera to make experimental imaging data quantifiable and reproducible by measuring images in photoelectrons.
Science Magazine

DECEMBER 2009
"Top 10 Innovations" of 2009
Photometrics' Evolve™ EMCCD Camera named one of "The 10 most exciting tools to hit life sciences this year."

Guiding Light
How to manipulate cellular events with the right light sensing molecule and a flash of light.




Evolve EMCCD - "Top 10 Innovations" of 2009



How to manipulate cellular events with the right light sensing molecule and a flash of light.

Science Magazine

OCTOBER 2009
Featured Product
Science Magazine, Evolve Camera Featured Product
Microscopy Today

SEPTEMBER 2009
Industry News (.pdf)

Industry News (Online version, Page 58)

Evolve EMCCD in Microscopy Today Industry News
Laboratory Talk logo

AUGUST 2009
Evolve camera uses photoelectron to measure images
Photometrics has introduced the Evolve EMCCD camera, which makes experimental imaging data quantifiable and reproducible by using the photoelectron to scientifically measure an image.
 
Microscopy & Analysis

SEPTEMBER 2009
Photometrics presents Evolve cameras at Neuroscience

Product News  

Accessories Guide (Page 12)

Photometrics presents Evolve cameras at Neuroscience

Microscopy Product News

Laboratory Equipment

SEPTEMBER 2009
The Future of Life Science
 
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SEPTEMBER 2009
Watching the Molecules - EMCCD camera lets researchers detect and see things that previously were hard to see. Dr. Deepak Sharma, Sr. Product Manager, Photometrics, discusses issues surrounding current imaging technologies and how the Evolve EMCCD camera helps make bio-imaging less arbitrary, more reproducible. Excerpt from interview with Barry Hochfelder, Editor of Advanced Imaging Magazine and AdvancedImagingPro.com.

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Biophotonics International logo

AUGUST 2008
Get the Most from Förster Resonance Energy Transfer
Get the Most from Förster Resonance Energy Transfer
Imaging & Microscopy

APRIL 2006
EMCCD Camera Technology Advances
EMCCD Camera Technology Advances
Laurin Publishing

JANUARY 2003
Laurin Publishing awards 2003 Photonics Spectra Circle of Excellence Award to Photometrics for Cascade Camera, first commercially available EMCCD camera for microscopy
 
Laurin Publishing awards Photonics Spectra Circle of Excellence Award to Photometrics for Cascade Camera
February 17, 2012First Single Camera, Multi-Parametric Cardiac Imaging System Uses Photometrics® Evolve™ EMCCD Camera
August 11, 2011Photometrics® Announces its New PVCAM® 2.8.0 Software Driver
November 1, 2010Photometrics® Announces its New Evolve™ 128 High-Performance EMCCD Camera
November 1, 2010Photometrics® Announces Exclusive eXcelon™ Technology Integration for Evolve™ 512 and 128 EMCCD Cameras
March 8, 2010Photometrics Introduces 64-Bit PVCam Driver
February 19, 2010Photometrics® to Offer Presentations on EMCCD Bio-imaging Advances at 2010 Biophysical Annual Meeting
January 26, 2010Breakthrough Back-Illuminated CCD & EMCCD Detector Technology Sets New Standard for Sensitivity
January 18, 2010Photometrics at SPIE BiOS, Booth 8873
January 13, 2010Laurin Publishing & SPIE BiOS Name Photometrics Evolve Prism Award Finalist
December 6, 2009Evolve EMCCD Camera at ASCB 2009; Booth 548
December 2, 2009The Scientist Names Photometrics’ Evolve EMCCD Camera One of the “Top 10 Innovations” of 2009
October 18, 2009Photometrics® Showcases its Evolve “Intelligent” EMCCD Bio-imaging Camera and New Online Scientific Imaging Tools at Neuroscience Meeting 2009
August 3, 2009Web Seminar August 24, 2009: Advancements in Fluorescence Proteins, Probes, and Biosensors
July 15, 2009Photometrics & QImaging Sponsor Intl GAP Junction Conference 2009
June 30, 2009Free Online Seminar August 19, 2009: Love or Hate Microscopy?
April 22, 2009Photometrics® Introduces Stimulus Support Program for Busy Researchers
March 1, 2009Photometrics® to Unveil its “Intelligent” EMCCD Evolve™ Bio-imaging Camera at the Biophysical Society’s 53rd Annual Meeting in Boston, MA March 1st – 3rd, 2009
February 9, 2009Evolve™ "Intelligent" EMCCD Camera from Photometrics® Makes Imaging Quantifiable and Reproducible
October 8, 2008Congratulations, Nobel Prize Winners!
May 2, 2008Photometrics Life Sciences Camera Offers Lowest EMCCD Read Noise

Photometrics has a rich history of creating new paradigm shifts in the way scientists conduct their research. Clearly the established leader of high-performance cameras, Photometrics consistently develops reliable products that are sought by researchers around the globe.

Photometrics has earned its leadership role with over three decades of strong product design and delivery. The company and its products have achieved multiple awards and continuously set the precedent for how cameras are designed to support and advance life science research.

Photometrics Company Achievements Timeline

2010 Photometrics releases Evolve™ 128, delivering the industry's highest frame rates and sensitivity for low-light research applications. The release included availability of exclusive eXcelon, a breakthrough back-illuminated CCD and EMCCD detector technology.
2009 Photometrics releases Evolve™ 512, creating a paradigm shift in life science research. Researchers gain ability to measure and quantify data in electrons, and create reproducible data in multiple scenarios.
2006 Photometrics ships QuantEM, only 16-bit EMCCD scientific camera with bias stability & linearized gain.
2005 Photometrics acquires Optical Insights, LLC & integrates multispectral imaging devices (Dual-View, Dual-Cam & Quad-View) into product line.
2004 Photometrics develops special camera used by NASA for thermal imaging of space shuttle.
2002 Photometrics receives Circle of Excellence Award for Cascade, the world's first EMCCD camera.
2001 Photometrics introduces Cascade, the world's first scientific-grade microscopy EMCCD camera.
1999 Photometrics introduces its first CoolSNAP camera.
1997 Photometrics attains ISO 9001 certification, folding the engineering design process into the quality system.
1996 Photometrics ships first Quantix camera. It borrows camera head technology from Series 200, but adds 12-bit digitization up to 5 MHz.
1995 Photometrics ships 1st SenSys camera, an inexpensive, self-contained CCD camera utilizing PPD.
1993 Photometrics ships 1st “zero footprint” CCD camera with Primary Point Digitization (PPD).
1989 Photometrics ships the Star 1 camera system targeted to the astronomy market. Star 1 borrows technology from Series 200, but is simplified to support a single CCD type.
1987 Photometrics develops CCD to fiberoptic bonding process; ships 1st fiber-bonded CCD camera.
1986 Photometrics develops CCD backthinning process with CCD manufacturers.
1985 Dr. Robert Ballard uses Photometrics camera to discover RMS Titanic.
1980 Photometrics ships commercially-available, scientific CCD camera, the Model 80A TEC-cooled camera.
1979 Photometrics ships first “special” cameras: one-offs typical of high-tech start-ups. Cameras were targeted to the astronomy community.
1978 The dawn of high-performance CCD imaging occurs with the establishment of Photometrics in Tucson, Arizona, by Dr. Richard Aikens.

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