Institutions

Summary: Aix-Marseille Universite is one of France's largest universities and, together with CNRS and Centrale Mediterranee, co-tutors several major photonics and astrophysics joint research units in Marseille, including the Institut Fresnel (optics, photonics and biophotonics) and the Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille (space and ground instrumentation).

Notes:

Department(s)/lab(s): Engineering | Institut Fresnel - Vector & Polarization Imaging Team @ CNRS
Summary:

Brasselet is a CNRS researcher at Institut Fresnel developing polarization- and orientation-resolved fluorescence microscopy, using controlled excitation and detection polarization states to map the 3D orientation and organization of fluorescent probes and biomolecular assemblies (e.g. lipid order, amyloid and cytoskeletal structures) at and beyond the single-molecule level, including recent work on the mathematical foundations of polarimetric microscopy.

Department(s)/lab(s): Engineering | Institut Fresnel - MOSAIC Biophotonics Team @ CNRS
Summary:

Rigneault leads the MOSAIC team at Institut Fresnel, developing label-free nonlinear optical microscopy (CARS/SRS) for chemically-specific imaging of lipids and biomolecules in tissue, and pioneering lensless, hair-thin fiber-bundle endoscopes based on wavefront control for minimally invasive deep-tissue and in vivo biological imaging. He holds 17 patents in optical engineering and molecular spectroscopy for the life sciences.

Department(s)/lab(s): Engineering | Institut Fresnel - Computational & Super-Resolution Imaging Team @ CNRS
Summary:

Sentenac develops computational super-resolution fluorescence microscopy at Institut Fresnel, notably Random Illumination Microscopy (RIM), which reconstructs sub-diffraction images from the statistics (variance) of many speckle-illuminated acquisitions without requiring photoswitchable probes, along with the underlying inverse-problem theory that establishes its resolution limits and robustness for live and thick-sample imaging.