The Raman technique is ideal for analysing cultural heritage pieces, as Dr. Rosie A. Grayburn, Associate Scientist and Lab Manager, Department of Conservation at the Winterthur Museum, explains: “The ability to examine analyse objects in-situ using the sizeable chamber of the inVia meant that answering these research questions could be done non-destructively, which is of crucial importance when studying unique objects of cultural relevance.”
The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), USA, combines Raman microscopy with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to study archaeological textiles and fibres. UCLA use a Renishaw SEM-SCA system to study textiles and fibres, non-destructively. The f
projít na článekThe Geological Institute of Romania, located in Bucharest, was founded in 1906. It is famous for its museum which hosts a collection of more than 80,000 samples of rocks, fossils and minerals from all over Romania. They combine Raman microscopy with scann
projít na článekThe Virsa Raman Analyser is a versatile, fibre-optic-coupled Raman spectroscopy system designed for reliable, detailed remote analysis. It enables the expansion of applications of Raman spectroscopy to a new range of samples and environments beyond the co
projít na článekStudy low wavenumber Raman features quickly and easily with Renishaw's Eclipse filters for the inVia Raman microscope; block the laser, not your Raman bands.
projít na článekRenishaw's inVia Raman microscope has been used in a recent study which demonstrates that Raman and surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) spectroscopies are information rich, non-destructive techniques for the monitoring of subtle intracellular changes
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