Science
Filming a 3D video of a virus with instantaneous light and AI – EurekAlert
A POSTECH joint research team demonstrates highly efficient 3D nano-imaging with XFEL and machine learning.

IMAGE: Elastic strain analysis
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Credit: POSTECH
It is millions of trillions of times brighter than the sunlight and a whopping 1,000 trillionth of a second, appropriately called the instantaneous light. It is the X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) light that opens a new scientific paradigm. Combining it with AI, an international research team has succeeded in filming and restoring the 3D structure of nanoparticles that share structural similarities with viruses. With the fear of a new pandemic…
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