[17-07-2016]
(By: LION/EA) 
A new NMR microscope gives researchers an improved instrument to  study fundamental physical processes. It also offers new possibilities  for medical science, for example to better study proteins in Alzheimer  patients’ brains. Publication in Physical Review Applied.
  If you  get a knee injury, physicians use an MRI machine to look right  through the skin and see what exactly is the problem. For this trick,  doctors make use of the fact that our body’s atomic nuclei are  electrically charged and spin around their axis. Just like small  electromagnets they induce their own magnetic field. By placing the knee  in a uniform magnetic field, the nuclei line up with their axis  pointing in the same direction. The MRI machine then sends a specific  type of radio waves through the knee, causing some axes to flip. After  turning off this signal, those nuclei flip back after some time, under  excitation of a small radio wave. Those waves give away the atoms’  location, and provide physicians with an accurate image of the knee.
  NMR
 MRI is the medical application of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR),  which is based on the same principle and was invented by physicists to  conduct fundamental research on materials. One of the things they study  with NMR is the so-called relaxation time. This is the time scale at  which the nuclei flip back and it gives a lot of information about a  material’s properties.
  Microscope
To study materials on the smallest of scales as well, physicists go one  step further and develop NMR microscopes, with which they study the  mechanics behind physical processes at the level of a group of atoms.  Now Leiden PhD students Jelmer Wagenaar and Arthur de Haan have built an  NMR microscope, together with principal investigator Tjerk Oosterkamp,  that operates at a record temperature of 42 milliKelvin—close to  absolute zero. In their article in Physical Review Applied they prove it  works by measuring the relaxation time of copper. They achieved a  thousand times higher sensitivity than existing NMR microscopes—also a  world record.
  Alzheimer's
With their microscope, they give physicists an instrument to conduct  fundamental research on many physical phenomena, like systems displaying  strange behavior in extreme cold. And like NMR eventually led to MRI  machines in hospitals, NMR microscopes have great potential too.  Wagenaar: ‘One example is that you might be able to use our technique to  study Alzheimer patients’ brains at the molecular level, in order to  find out how iron is locked up in proteins.’ 
  Article
‘Probing the  nuclear spin-lattice relaxation time at the nanoscale’, J. J. T.  Wagenaar, A. M. J. den Haan, J. M. de Voogd, L. Bossoni, T. A. de Jong,  M. de Wit, K. M. Bastiaans, D. J. Thoen, A. Endo, T. M. Klapwijk, J.  Zaanen and T.H. Oosterkamp, Physical Review Applied
      
   NMR microscope, consisting of a thin wire and a small  magnetic ball (fake colour purple). The purple ball induces a uniform  magnetic field, so that the surrounding atomic nuclei all line up with  their axis pointing in the same direction. The researchers send radio  waves through their sample, causing some nuclei to flip the other way,  and measure how long it takes before they flip back again.