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"I can think about things so I am not consciously aware I am thinking about them," he explained. Chu and colleagues at Stanford University and University of California at Berkeley had been working on the sub-nanometer paper off-and-on since 2003, long before he joined President Barack Obama's Cabinet. It's complicated, but Chu's idea involved using two different colored lights, beams of tiny light and a few other techniques to reduce the signal-to-noise ratio in optical microscopes. The work, published online Wednesday, is being hailed as a big breakthrough by three outside experts in the microscopy field. "It's tremendously important," said John Fourkas at the University of Maryland. "It's something that in a few years everybody in the single molecule field will use if they are going to be on the cutting edge." ___ Online: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/
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