Shimadzu
Founded | Kyoto, Japan (1875 | )
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Headquarters | , Japan |
Products | Scientific instruments |
Website | http://www.shimadzu.com/ |
Footnotes / references |
Shimadzu Corporation (株式会社島津製作所, Kabushiki-gaisha Shimazu Seisakusho) (TYO: 7701) is a manufacturer of precision instruments, measuring instruments and medical equipment, based in Kyoto, Japan.
The company was established by Genzo Shimadzu (島津 源蔵, Shimazu Genzō) in 1875. X-ray devices, the spectrum camera, the electron microscope, and the gas chromatograph were developed and commercialized in advance of other Japanese companies. In 2002, Koichi Tanaka, a longstanding employee, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for developing a method of mass spectrometric analysis of biological macromolecules. The company also developed an ultra-high speed video camera, HyperVision HPV-1, which is capable of recording at 1,000,000 FPS.[1][2]
Other products developed by Shimadzu include head-mounted displays.[3]
Shimadzu is the world's only producer of a "Direct-Conversion" Flat Panel Detector for Cardiac, Angiography and General Radiography examinations.[4]