| Literature DB >> 29245807 |
Talon Chandler, Shalin Mehta, Hari Shroff, Rudolf Oldenbourg, Patrick J La Rivière.
Abstract
We investigate the use of polarized illumination in multiview microscopes for determining the orientation of single-molecule fluorescence transition dipoles. First, we relate the orientation of single dipoles to measurable intensities in multiview microscopes and develop an information-theoretic metric-the solid-angle uncertainty-to compare the ability of multiview microscopes to estimate the orientation of single dipoles. Next, we compare a broad class of microscopes using this metric-single- and dual-view microscopes with varying illumination polarization, illumination numerical aperture (NA), detection NA, obliquity, asymmetry, and exposure. We find that multi-view microscopes can measure all dipole orientations, while the orientations measurable with single-view microscopes is halved because of symmetries in the detection process. We also find that choosing a small illumination NA and a large detection NA are good design choices, that multiview microscopes can benefit from oblique illumination and detection, and that asymmetric NA microscopes can benefit from exposure asymmetry.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29245807 PMCID: PMC5941992 DOI: 10.1364/OE.25.031309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Opt Express ISSN: 1094-4087 Impact factor: 3.894