Citations:femtonewton

English citations of femtonewton

  • 1993, Walt W. Webb, “Developmental Resource for Biophysical Imaging Opto-Electronics”, in Resources for Biomedical Research Technology[1], U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; Public Health Service; National Institutes of Health, page 10:
    A new optical force microscopy development scans surface profiles at 10 femtonewton force sensitivity and 10 nm resolution.
  • 2002, Shoji Maruo, Koji Ikuta, Hajato Korogi, “Direct Nanomanipulation Tools for Biological Samples”, in Yoshinobu Baba, Shuichi Shoji, Albert van den Berg, editors, Micro Total Analysis Systems 2002: Proceedings of the μTAS 2002 Symposium, held in Nara, Japan, 3–7 November 2002[2], volume 2, Springer Science & Business Media, published 2012, →ISBN, page 937:
    The femtonewton order force-control of the manipulator arm was also demonstrated by adjusting the focal position of the trapped laser beam.
  • 2018, Trevor J. Gahl, Anja Kunze, “Force-Mediating Magnetic Nanoparticles to Engineer Neuronal Cell Function”, in Ioan Opris, Mikhail Lebedev, Ruxandra Vidu, Victor Manuel Pulgar, Marius Enachescu, Manuel Fernando Casanova, editors, Nanotechnologies in Neuroscience and Neuroengineering[3], Frontiers Media SA, published 2020, →ISBN, page 144:
    The authors reported operating nanomagnetic forces in the femtonewton range below the thermal fluctuation threshold (Ducasse et al., 2017).
  • 2020, Jing Liu, Zhi-Juan Li, “Optical Tweezers” (chapter 6), in Klaus D. Sattler, editor, 21st Century Nanoscience – A Handbook: Nanophotonics, Nanoelectronics, and Nanoplasmonics[4], volume 6, CRC Press, →ISBN, Introduction, Principle, and Application (section 1), page 201:
    As is well known, optical tweezers can trap various objects as small as nanometer-size particles and can exert optical forces with controllable amount at the femtonewton resolution.