fluorescence$29025$ - traduzione in greco
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fluorescence$29025$ - traduzione in greco

QUENCHING REFERS TO ANY PROCESS WHICH DECREASES THE FLUORESCENCE INTENSITY OF A GIVEN SUBSTANCE.
Fluorescence quenching; Quencher (fluorescence)

fluorescence      
n. λάμψη μέσω φθορίου, λάμψις διά φθορίου, φθορισμός

Definizione

fish test
How to tell genuine surrealistic invention from cod surrealism - that perpetrated by people who think that surrealism involves a fish up a tree, a man holding a fish outside a toilet, a fish and a lettuce hanging from the ceiling, men with fish in their mouths. See reprehensible UK comedy Dare To Believe for the worst example of this.
Uh-oh, here's a new off-the-wall comedy. Time to apply the fish test.

Wikipedia

Quenching (fluorescence)

Quenching refers to any process which decreases the fluorescence intensity of a given substance. A variety of processes can result in quenching, such as excited state reactions, energy transfer, complex-formation and collisional quenching. As a consequence, quenching is often heavily dependent on pressure and temperature. Molecular oxygen, iodide ions and acrylamide are common chemical quenchers. The chloride ion is a well known quencher for quinine fluorescence. Quenching poses a problem for non-instant spectroscopic methods, such as laser-induced fluorescence.

Quenching is made use of in optode sensors; for instance the quenching effect of oxygen on certain ruthenium complexes allows the measurement of oxygen saturation in solution. Quenching is the basis for Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) assays. Quenching and dequenching upon interaction with a specific molecular biological target is the basis for activatable optical contrast agents for molecular imaging. Many dyes undergo self-quenching, which can decrease the brightness of protein-dye conjugates for fluorescence microscopy, or can be harnessed in sensors of proteolysis.