| Literature DB >> 33870104 |
Cheng Zheng1,2, Di Jin3, Yanping He1, Hongtao Lin4, Juejun Hu5, Zahid Yaqoob6, Peter T C So2,6,7, Renjie Zhou1,8.
Abstract
A new optical microscopy technique, termed high spatial and temporal resolution synthetic aperture phase microscopy (HISTR-SAPM), is proposed to improve the lateral resolution of wide-field coherent imaging. Under plane wave illumination, the resolution is increased by twofold to around 260 nm, while achieving millisecond-level temporal resolution. In HISTR-SAPM, digital micromirror devices are used to actively change the sample illumination beam angle at high speed with high stability. An off-axis interferometer is used to measure the sample scattered complex fields, which are then processed to reconstruct high-resolution phase images. Using HISTR-SAPM, we are able to map the height profiles of subwavelength photonic structures and resolve the period structures that have 198 nm linewidth and 132 nm gap (i.e., a full pitch of 330 nm). As the reconstruction averages out laser speckle noise while maintaining high temporal resolution, HISTR-SAPM further enables imaging and quantification of nanoscale dynamics of live cells, such as red blood cell membrane fluctuations and subcellular structure dynamics within nucleated cells. We envision that HISTR-SAPM will broadly benefit research in material science and biology.Keywords: cell dynamics observation; label-free imaging; material inspection; quantitative phase microscopy
Year: 2020 PMID: 33870104 PMCID: PMC8049284 DOI: 10.1117/1.ap.2.6.065002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Photonics