| Literature DB >> 24940548 |
Joo Hyun Park1, Jae Yong Lee2, Eun Seong Lee3.
Abstract
We present a method to improve the isotropy of spatial resolution in a structured illumination microscopy (SIM) implemented for imaging non-fluorescent samples. To alleviate the problem of anisotropic resolution involved with the previous scheme of coherent SIM that employs the two orthogonal standing-wave illumination, referred to as the orthogonal SIM, we introduce a hexagonal-lattice illumination that incorporates three standing-wave fields simultaneously superimposed at the orientations equally divided in the lateral plane. A theoretical formulation is worked out rigorously for the coherent image formation with such a simultaneous multiple-beam illumination and an explicit Fourier-domain framework is derived for reconstructing an image with enhanced resolution. Using a computer-synthesized resolution target as a 2D coherent sample, we perform numerical simulations to examine the imaging characteristics of our three-angle SIM compared with the orthogonal SIM. The investigation on the 2D resolving power with the various test patterns of different periods and orientations reveal that the orientation-dependent undulation of lateral resolution can be reduced from 27% to 8% by using the three-angle SIM while the best resolution (0.54 times the resolution limit of conventional coherent imaging) in the directions of structured illumination is slightly deteriorated by 4.6% from that of the orthogonal SIM.Keywords: (100.6640) Superresolution; (110.0180) Microscopy; (110.1650) Coherence imaging; (110.2990) Image formation theory; (110.3010) Image reconstruction techniques
Year: 2014 PMID: 24940548 PMCID: PMC4052918 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.5.001895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732