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Volume 26


Number 6 December 2020


preview of some upcoming articles


Dear Abbe Volume 25, Number 6 December 2019


Dear Abbe, A question regarding channeling fusion. Having unlimited


power from controlled nuclear fusion would be of great bene- fit. One approach to this is called inertial confinement. A pel- let could be hit by suitable beams to compress it enough to get the atoms to fuse. Most research has been focused on using laser beams rather than particle beams (scurrilously, it is supposed that this was because the military wanted powerful lasers to use as weapons, whereas particle beams would be of no use for this purpose). Now it would appear that a very good approach to this problem would be to fire protons at boron. Te reaction p + 11


B Includes manuscripts developed from the 39th


Annual Meeting of the Electron Microscope Society of India, Bhubaneswar, 18-20 July 2018


Guest Editor: Professor P. V. Satyam ISSN 1431-9276


Materials Science Applications Revealing solute clusters in coalescence by APT analysis Hu, Rong; Liu, Jizi; Zhang, Yidong; Sha, Gang


Plasma Focused Ion Beam Serial Sectioning as a Technique to Characterize Nonmetallic Inclusions in Superelastic Nitinol Fine Wires Gbur, Janet; Kelley, Ronald; Lewandowski, John


Soſtware and Instrumentation Comparison of Experimental STEM Conditions for Fluctuation Electron Microscopy Radić, Dražen; Hilke, Sven; Peterlechner, Martin; Posselt, Matthias; Wilde, Gerhard; Bracht, Hartmut


A comparison of a direct electron detector and a high speed video camera for scanning precession electron diffraction phase and orientation mapping MacLaren, Ian; Frutos Myro, Enrique; McGrouther, Damien; McFazean, Samuel; Weiss, Jon; Cosart, Doug; Portillo, Joaquim; Robins, Alan; Nicolopoulos, Stavros; Nebot del Busto, Eduardo; Skogeby, Richard


Properties of Dipole-Mode Vibrational Energy Losses Recorded from a TEM Specimen Egerton, Ray; Venkatraman, Kartik; March, Katia; Crozier, Peter


Laboratory soſt X-ray microscopy with an integrated visible-light microscope - Correlative workflow for faster 3D cell imaging Dehlinger, Aurélie; Seim, Christian; Stiel, Holger; Twamley, Shailey; Ludwig, Antje; Kördel, Mikael; Grötzsch, Daniel; Rehbein, Stefan; Kanngießer, Birgit


Dynamic Effects in Voltage Pulsed Atom Probe Rousseau, Loic; Normand, Antoine; Ferraz Morgado de Oliveira, Felipe; Stephenson, Leigh; Tehrani, Kambiz; Gault, Baptiste; Vurpillot, Francois


Inelastic scattering in electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and electron channeling contrast imaging (ECCI) Mendis, Budhika; Barthel, Juri; Findlay, Scott; Allen, Les


“You are Not My Type”: An Evaluation of Classification Methods for Automatic Phytolith Identification Zurro, Debora; Díez-Pastor, José-Francisco; Latorre Carmona, Pedro; Arnaiz-González, Alvar; Ruiz-Pérez


Automated Single Particle Reconstruction of Heterogeneous Inorganic Nanoparticles Slater, Tomas; Wang, Yi-Chi; Leteba, Gerard; Quiroz, Jhon; Camargo, Pedro; Haigh, Sarah; Allen, Christopher


Biological Applications Resveratrol Ameliorates the Seminiferous Tubules Damages Induced by Finasteride in Adult Male Rats Shalaby, Amany; Alabiad, Mohamed; El Shaer, Dina


Galectin-3 Expression in Pancreatic Cell Lines under Distinct Autophagy Inducing Stimulus Rêgo, Moacyr; Silva-Filho, Antônio; Sousa, Lizandra; Consonni, Silvio; Pitta, Maira; Carvalho, Hernandes


Epithelial Distribution of E-cadherin, p63 and Mitotic Figures in ApoTome Images to Determine the Oncogenic Potentiality of Oral Submucous Fibrosis Nag, Reetoja; Paul, Ranjan; Pal, Mousumi; Chatterjee, Jyotirmoy; Das, Raunak


2020 November • www.microscopy-today.com 2021 Innovation Awards Entry deadline is March 23, 2021


Request application forms by email: charles.lyman@lehigh.edu


generates power without producing neutrons. Tis makes it both safer and more efficient than other methods. However, if pro- tons are fired at a lump of boron, they are scattered at random, and few of them interact with the boron nuclei before losing all of their energy. Nonetheless, we microscopists know that if par- ticles are incident on a single crystal at the right orientation, the particles will travel concentrated down the rows of atoms. Why, I ask you, has research not been done to develop efficient genera- tion of very parallel proton beams to bring this vision to reality? Enys in Weald


Dear Enys, Sigh. I get asked this question so oſten, it gave me a sense of


déjà vu. Like that time I ate that really old borscht. I will answer this quandary and hope to never be asked again. First, have you ever tried shooting anything at a lump of boron? Nein? Ich dachte nicht. It can be exceedingly tedious. Why do something so boring? Besides, to shoot “particles … incident on a single crystal” requires finding a really big crystal! Most of them have been acquired by New Age enthusiasts around Sedona and have become scarcer than Dita Von Teese’s wardrobe. Aim- ing the protons right—so the “particles … travel concentrated down the rows of atoms”? Tey’ll pass right on through, won’t they? Where’s your power now, hm? It can be difficult to bring vision to reality when it is so astigmatic.


Feeling bored? Having trouble with your power sources?


Shoot it to Herr Abbe at johnshields59@gmail.com. He’ll be scurrilous at best.


doi:10.1017/S1551929520001467


73


Volume 28 Number 5


2020 September


www.microscopy-today.com


Volume 28 Number 2


2020 March


www.microscopy-today.com


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