High Content Imaging

High content imaging is primarily concerned with the automated analysis of large cell populations where the goal is to process as many cells as possible in the fastest time with the highest resolution.

To facilitate this, we offer scientific cameras that feature key specifications such as large fields of view, high pixel counts and fast speeds.

Kinetix photo

Kinetix

High sensitivity, 95% quantum efficient sCMOS camera with an incredibly high 400 fps full-frame speed and a massive 29.4 mm diagonal field of view.

The speed of the Kinetix significantly outperforms typical sCMOS devices. With a full-frame framerate of 400 fps and a 10 megapixel sensor, the Kinetix delivers over 4000 megapixels/second.

The huge 29.4 mm square sensor of the Kinetix is designed to increase throughput, maximize the amount of data captured in a single frame and significantly speed up data acquisition. Perfect for high content imaging applications.

Iris 15 Camera photo

Iris 15

High resolution, large field of view, monochrome sCMOS camera with 15 million pixels.

The Iris 15 is the ideal solution for high content imaging when resolution is of the greatest importance. The tiny, 4.25 µm pixels allow for the highest resolution while still delivering a large, 25 mm diagonal field of view to maximize throughput.

Prime BSI Express Camera

Prime BSI Express

High sensitivity, 95% quantum efficient, monochrome sCMOS camera with 4.2 million pixels and 1.0e read noise.

The highly sensitive, back-illuminated Prime BSI is particularly suitable for the lowest light high content imaging applications where detection is of vital importance.

Customer Stories

Live Cell Time Lapse

Prof. Kurt Anderson Francis Crick Institute

“By changing to the Prime BSI, it allowed users to reduce the magnification from 60 to 40 or 20, letting them take images with a much larger FOV without a loss of sensitivity.”

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Light Sheet and High Content Imaging

Dr. Christopher Yip University of Toronto

“Having the Iris 15’s high sensitivity, small pixels, and large field of view addresses a number of key experimental considerations for our study of development, including the ability to acquire overlapping images from different imaging angles, which is key for multi-view SPIM.”

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Mechanosensitive dSTORM

Dr. Alexandre Fürstenberg University Of Geneva

“”I am very impressed by the different modes of the Kinetix, and its ability to go as fast as 1000 fps.””

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