Detailed information about chemistry and fluid flow within microscopic structures such as microfluidic channels or blood vessels is now possible using a remote-detection approach to magnetic resonance imaging or nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1192313). Developed in the lab of Alexander Pines at the University of California, Berkeley, remote detection involves encoding magnetic resonance information into the nuclear spins of the ytes flowing through a microfluidic channel or other structure. The information is then read at a detector stationed at the channel outlet. Pines, Vikram S. Bajaj, and colleagues have now extended the technique to enable the use of a standard macroscopic magnetic coil to obtain information on the flow and velocity of liquids in microfluidic devices down to a spatial resolution of 15 μm—something that previously would have required stationing microscopic coils along the device channels. This approach may also be used to obtain flow information for fluids in microporous materials or in blood vessels in vivo, the researchers say, or NMR chemical shifts for compounds involved in high-throughput studies of cellular metaboli or in all-molecule screening.