Infrared and Terahertz Spectroscopy Market worth $1.3 billion by 2025 - Exclusive Report by MarketsandMarkets Infrared and Terahertz Spectroscopy Market by Instrument Type (Benchtop Instruments, Microscopy Instruments, Portable Instruments, Hyphenated Instruments), Spectrum, Application - Global Forecast to 2025 , published by MarketsandMarkets, the market is expected to reach USD 1.3 billion by 2025 from USD 1.0 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 5.2% during the forecast period. The key factors driving the growth of this market are the stringent regulations in the pharmaceutical industry, increasing food safety concerns & technological advancements.
Browse in-depth TOC on
111 - Tables
Download PDF Brochure: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=248742550
The terahertz spectroscopy market is expected to reach USD 45 million by 2025 from USD 30 million in 2020, at a CAGR of 8.3% during the forecast period. Growth in the market can primarily be attributed to fact
RAPAPORT. Walter William Hanneman, a gemologist, author and instrument maker, died on December 12 at the age of 93, his family announced this week.
Born in 1927 in Oak Park, Illinois, he entered the world of gems and minerals thanks to his father, Walter Mooney Hanneman, an avid lapidarist. The young Hanneman taught the subject to himself, later claiming to be the “world’s foremost self-ordained gemologist.”
His formal training was in organic chemistry: He earned a PhD at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and worked as a research analytical chemist for major companies in the field.
He achieved recognition in the gemology world for his numerous articles and books on spectroscopy, diamond grading and garnets, including his best-known work,
The global epidemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 virus has raised a need for serological testing to detect SARS-CoV-2 specific antibodies. Serological testing can be used as a convenient tool e.g. in epidemiological studies to understand and monitor the progression of epidemic in populations. For the vaccine development serological testing can be used in clinical trials to monitor vaccine response and IgG formation over time. After vaccination programs have been implemented, serological sur
Researchers analyze evaporation and propagation of respiratory droplets of COVID-19 patients
COVID-19 can be transmitted when an infected person talks, coughs, sneezes or sings, expelling virus-containing respiratory droplets that can reach the mouth, nose or eyes of previously uninfected people. These aqueous droplets tend to fall rapidly out of the air and evaporate on the floor or the ground, but some smaller droplets can evaporate before reaching the ground, leaving virus nuclei floating through the air.
Such infinitesimal aerosolized particles, or aerosols, can travel on air currents for hours and infect people, particularly when they spend prolonged periods of time in indoor settings that lack adequate ventilation. It is because transmission is possible via free-drifting aerosols that the coronavirus is referred to as an airborne disease.
Walter William Hanneman, a gemologist, author and instrument maker, died on December 12 at the age of 93, his family announced this week.Born in 1927 in Oak Park, Illinois, he entered the world of gems and minerals thanks to his father, Walter Mooney Hanneman, an avid lapidarist. The young.