Brian English

@sciencethecat
281 Followers
354 Following
19 Posts
senior scientist Janelia. single particle tracking & #microscopy. harvardccb PhD on #singlemolecule dynamics. my path: 🇩🇪-🇺🇲-🇸🇪-🇺🇲
google scholarhttps://t.co/8qKZIETLe9
I’m thrilled to announce that I am the voice behind a new ZEISS campaign focused on photonics—discover more about this exciting field and ZEISS’s pioneering role in it! 😀👉 https://www.zeiss.com/corporate/en/c/stories/insights/photonics.html
New in Nature Methods - spontaneously blinking dyes for live cell super-resolution:
https://bsky.app/profile/cathygalbraith.bsky.social/post/3mjs4qa2rs22s
cathygalbraith.bsky.social (@cathygalbraith.bsky.social)

It all started with (#2 in the series) New in Nature Methods - spontaneously blinking dyes for live cell super-resolution. No harsh chemicals or damaging light. 2 Nature family papers in two weeks 🤯 @rhodamine110.bsky.social @sciencethecat.bsky.social https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-026-03062-5 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70688-6

Bluesky Social
What if cells have undiscovered methods for managing their internal logistics? Our recent work (Catherine G. Galbraith, James A. Galbraith, @sciencethecat, &
& myself) challenges existing views on intracellular transportation 🔗 lnkd.in/dhMDgY5Q
Dr. Eric Schreiter demo at @hhmijanelia #bioluminescence #luciferase
artist D.Y. Begay derives her dyes from flowers, roots, barks, and lichens harvested from rocks around Diné bíkéyah #dyes #dybegay #tapestries #SmithsonianNMAI
hand-made silver #Janelia ChemisTree erlenmeyer flask ornaments @HHMI #TollensTest
Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS and the hunter's supermoon right from our doorstep in Arlington Virginia #CometC2023A3
We are so excited to have Kevin Dean visit next week as our first in-person Janelia+EMBL Bioimaging Series invited speaker. @markkitti #lightsheet
🌙-walk w/ Heloisa, Venus, and Jupiter.

a beautiful highlight of the microscopy by the Prevedel Lab: imaging 1.5mm into the brain #3Pmicroscopy #adaptiveoptics

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-00336-2

Smart microscopes spot fleeting biology

Automated microscopes that adapt to each sample’s quirks can capture elusive biological phenomena at high resolution.