| Literature DB >> 34367322 |
Chenfei Hu1,2,3, Jeffrey J Field4,5,6,3, Varun Kelkar1, Benny Chiang1,2, Keith Wernsing6, Kimani C Toussaint7, Randy A Bartels6,8, Gabriel Popescu1,2.
Abstract
Second-harmonic generation microscopy is a valuable label-free modality for imaging non-centrosymmetric structures and has important biomedical applications from live-cell imaging to cancer diagnosis. Conventional second-harmonic generation microscopy measures intensity signals that originate from tightly focused laser beams, preventing researchers from solving the scattering inverse problem for second-order nonlinear materials. Here, we present harmonic optical tomography (HOT) as a novel modality for imaging microscopic, nonlinear and inhomogeneous objects. The HOT principle of operation relies on inter-ferometrically measuring the complex harmonic field and using a scattering inverse model to reconstruct the three-dimensional distribution of harmonophores. HOT enables strong axial sectioning via the momentum conservation of spatially and temporally broadband fields. We illustrate the HOT operation with experiments and reconstructions on a beta-barium borate crystal and various biological specimens. Although our results involve second-order nonlinear materials, we show that this approach applies to any coherent nonlinear process.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34367322 PMCID: PMC8341385 DOI: 10.1038/s41566-020-0638-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Photonics ISSN: 1749-4885 Impact factor: 38.771