| 1. | The acceptor fluorophore in turn emits light at its characteristic wavelength.
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| 2. | Absorption of a photon by a fluorophore takes a few picoseconds.
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| 3. | It is at this G-quadruplex that the fluorophore binds.
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| 4. | A fluorophore is a dipole, surrounded by water molecules.
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| 5. | Narrow peaks indicate that the fluorophore sample is highly monodisperse.
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| 6. | Freed from the quencher, the fluorophore now shines when scanned with a laser.
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| 7. | This saves the cost of modifying the primary antibodies to directly carry a fluorophore.
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| 8. | Richard Meyer then termed fluorophore in 1897 to describe a chemical group associated with fluorescence.
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| 9. | The optic nerve was injected with a fluorophore, causing retinal ganglion cells to fluoresce.
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| 10. | This causes the separation of the stem and hence of the fluorophore and the quencher.
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