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Pietro Ferraro

Researcher at National Research Council

Publications -  720
Citations -  14634

Pietro Ferraro is an academic researcher from National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Digital holography & Holography. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 653 publications receiving 12666 citations. Previous affiliations of Pietro Ferraro include Aeritalia & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Label-free analysis of mononuclear human blood cells in microfluidic flow by coherent imaging tools.

TL;DR: The results confirm the possibility to obtain sub‐micrometric details of physical cell properties in microfluidic flow, avoiding chemical staining or fluorescent labelling.
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Maskless Arrayed Nanofiber Mats by Bipolar Pyroelectrospinning

TL;DR: The b-PES is free from expensive electrodes, nozzles, and masks because it makes use simply of the structured pyroelectric field produced by the PPLN crystal used as collector, and shows clearly the reliability of the technique in producing a wide variety of arrayed fiber mats that could find application in bioengineering or many other fields.
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Biophysical investigation of living monocytes in flow by collaborative coherent imaging techniques

TL;DR: A completely label-free biophysical (morphometric and optical) property characterization of living monocytes in flow is implemented, confirming the possibility to differentiate monocytes from other cell classes in flow, thus avoiding chemical cell staining or labeling, which are nowadays used.
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Numerical tools for the characterization of microelectromechanical systems by digital holographic microscopy

TL;DR: This review describes the principles of digital holography in microscopy and shows the most important numerical tools discovered and applied to date in the field of MEMS.
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Visible reconstruction by a circular holographic display from digital holograms recorded under infrared illumination

TL;DR: A circular holographic display that consists of phase-only spatial light modulators is used to reconstruct images in visible light from digital holograms recorded under infrared (10.6 μm) illumination, yielding a three-dimensional ghostlike image of an object floating in space where observers can move and rotate around it.