Single molecule-based super-resolution microscopy
In ultra-high resolution Microscopy (PALM and STORM), we image biological structures and processes at length scales far below the optical diffraction limit of a few hundred nanometers. In this project we address the technical limitations using (combinations of) new approaches, and we develop new holistic model-based data analysis strategies. We aim to achieve resolution of one nanometer by developing single particle analysis tools in order to make dynamic super-resolution imaging a valid method for studying mobile protein clusters in live cells.
Structural geometry and shape statistics
We construct reconstruction algorithms in ultra-high resolution microscopy for PALM and STORM imaging systems for the analysis of biosystems. Mathematically, the data are different modes of protomers. The techniques used here are methods from shape statistics and denoising. In order to reconstruct the statistics of the geometries of the oligomers in a cell, we have to take into account their symmetries.
Research Team
From Subproject: Tomography in Astronomy
Professor of Mathematics
Scientific Director of RICAM
From Subproject: Tomography with Uncertainties
Professor at the Faculty of Mathematics
Computational Science Center
From Subproject: Ultra-high Resolution Microscopy
Professor at the Institute of Applied Physics
From Subproject: Motion Detection in Tomography and Microscopy
Institute of Mathematics
Strasse des 17. Juni 136
10587 Berlin
Professor at Technische Universität Berlin