What can Differential Dynamic Microscopy do for you?
The dynamics of soft matter systems are key to their understanding, the dynamics themselves are of interest but can also provide information on the underlying physics and characterisation of the system. Differential Dynamic Microscopy (DDM) is a relatively new technique for studying these dynamics over a range of time- and length-scales. DDM has been applied to a wide range of systems in the literature with more published each week, however most experimentalists are not familiar with the technique. In this talk I will introduce DDM and provide an intuitive overview of how it works, before discussing several examples of DDM which highlight its strengths and concluding with an overview of other applications selected to align with interests of others in the school.
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