Current Topics in Biophysics (SC/BPHS 2090 3.0) (archived)
Here are some websites pertinent to the study of Biological Physics
Articles collected by Dr. Menary
Links to stories and articles pertinent to biological physics (courtesy of Dr. Menary)
Biophysics at York
Here you will find information about the Biophysics degree
program at York University. The required courses and suggested rate of progress will give you an idea about
the depth and breadth of the Biophysics degree program, available in the
Biophysics Handbook [pdf].
Quantitative Biology in Canada
Here you will find information about the biological physicists in Canada
who are applying their quantitative techniques to biological problems. The website includes links to
undergraduate and graduate biophysics programs in Canada. And, Biological Physics in Canada on
Facebook.
Biophysical Society of Canada
This is the home page of the Biophysical Society if Canada. The website provides
links to Biophysics researchers in Canada, as well as information about biophysics meetings.
Biophysical Society
This is the home page of the Biophysical Journal. The website offers
a variety of
educational resources as well.
Tensile Water movies from the International Space Station
The tensile strength of water is something we commonly view as a property of the
water surface (because of the tyranny of gravity). In the absence of gravity, there
are some surprises, as demonstrated by Don Pettit on the International
Space Station. Tensile water is a key element in the Lew Lecture on "the height of
a tree".
Movies of Bacterial Motility at
the Rowland Institute at Harvard (Howard C. Berg)
The range of different kinds of bacterial motility is extraordinary:
Run and tumble swimming, twitching and gliding. In each case, the underlying physics is quite different.
Professor Howard C. Berg has been exploring the physics
of bacterial motility for decades; some of his research is described in the Lew lecture on NanoMotors.
Canadian Light Source
Canada is home to an amazing biophysics resource at the bleeding edge of research into biological
problems: A synchotron light source at the University of Saskatchewan in Sasktoon. The range of experimental problems
that can be addressed are remarkable. This is because of the 'brightness' of the light source (where light is used in the
physical sense of electromagnetic radiations ranging from hard X-rays to Far Infrared).
NCBI Bookshelf: Berg et al. Biochemistry
A useful resource for background information about cellular
biochemistry.
NCBI Bookshelf: Gilbert Developmental Biology
A useful resource for background information about developmental
biology. Unfortunately, animal-centric.