| Literature DB >> 31065449 |
Lu Song1, Yuanhua Feng2, Xiaojie Guo1, Yuecheng Shen3, Daixuan Wu3, Zhenhua Wu1, Congran Zhou4, Linyan Zhu4, Shecheng Gao2, Weiping Liu2, Xuming Zhang5,6, Zhaohui Li3,7.
Abstract
Optical polarization imaging has played an important role in many biological and biomedical applications, as it provides a label-free and non-invasive detection scheme to reveal the polarization information of optical rotation, birefringence, and photoelasticity distribution inherent in biological samples. However, the imaging speeds of the previously demonstrated polarization imaging techniques were often limited by the slow frame rates of the arrayed imaging detectors, which usually run at frame rates of several hundred hertz. By combining the optical coherent detection of orthogonal polarizations and the optical time-stretch imaging technique, we achieved ultrafast polarization bio-imaging at an extremely fast record line scanning rate up to 100 MHz without averaging. We experimentally demonstrated the superior performance of our method by imaging three slices of different kinds of biological samples with the retrieved Jones matrix and polarization-sensitive information including birefringence and diattenuation. The proposed system in this paper may find potential applications for ultrafast polarization dynamics in living samples or some other advanced biomedical research.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 31065449 PMCID: PMC6490988 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.9.006556
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732