FW: [EXTERN] arXiv New submission -> 2411.11712 in physics.optics from Kareem.elsayad@meduniwien.ac.at
On 19.11.24, 04:00, "e-prints@arxiv.org <mailto:e-prints@arxiv.org>" <e-prints@arxiv.org <mailto:e-prints@arxiv.org>> wrote: Your submission submit/6002321 has been assigned the permanent arXiv identifier 2411.11712 and is available at: http://arxiv.org/abs/2411.11712 <http://arxiv.org/abs/2411.11712> The paper password for this article is: peexv Please share this with your co-authors. They may use it to claim ownership. Abstract will appear in today's mailing as: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ \\ arXiv:2411.11712 From: Kareem Elsayad <Kareem.elsayad@meduniwien.ac.at <mailto:Kareem.elsayad@meduniwien.ac.at>> Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2024 16:37:33 GMT (2451kb) Title: Consensus Statement on Brillouin Light Scattering Microscopy of Biological Materials Authors: Pierre Bouvet, Carlo Bevilacqua, Yogeshwari Ambekar, Giuseppe Antonacci, Joshua Au, Silvia Caponi, Sophie Chagnon-Lessard, Juergen Czarske, Thomas Dehoux, Daniele Fioretto, Yujian Fu, Jochen Guck, Thorsten Hamann, Dag Heinemann, Torsten J\"ahnke, Hubert Jean-Ruel, Irina Kabakova, Kristie Koski, Nektarios Koukourakis, David Krause, Salvatore La Cavera III, Timm Landes, Jinhao Li, Jeremie Margueritat, Maurizio Mattarelli, Michael Monaghan, Darryl R. Overby, Fernando Perez-Cota, Emanuele Pontecorvo, Robert Prevedel, Giancarlo Ruocco, John Sandercock, Giuliano Scarcelli, Filippo Scarponi, Claudia Testi, Peter T\"or\"ok, Lucie Vovard, Wolfgang Weninger, Vladislav Yakovlev, Seok-Hyun Yun, Jitao Zhang, Francesca Palombo, Alberto Bilenca, Kareem Elsayad Categories: physics.optics physics.bio-ph physics.ins-det Comments: Main Text & Supplementary Text: 56 pages, 3 Figures, 2 Supplementary Figures, 1 Supplementary Table License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/> \\ Brillouin Light Scattering (BLS) spectroscopy is a non-invasive, non-contact, label-free optical technique that can provide information on the mechanical properties of a material on the sub-micron scale. Over the last decade it has seen increased applications in the life sciences, driven by the observed significance of mechanical properties in biological processes, the realization of more sensitive BLS spectrometers and its extension to an imaging modality. As with other spectroscopic techniques, BLS measurements not only detect signals characteristic of the investigated sample, but also of the experimental apparatus, and can be significantly affected by measurement conditions. The aim of this consensus statement is to improve the comparability of BLS studies by providing reporting recommendations for the measured parameters and detailing common artifacts. Given that most BLS studies of biological matter are still at proof-of-concept stages and use different--often self-built--spectrometers, a consensus statement is particularly timely to assure unified advancement. \\ Contains: CONSENSUS_ArXiv_v2.pdf: 2510309 bytes
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Kareem Elsayad