Partially coherent light-emitting diode illumination for video-rate in-line holographic microscopy
The light of a light-emitting diode or a common thermal source, such as a tungsten filament lamp, is known to be quasi-incoherent. We generated partially coherent light of these sources with a volume of coherence in the micrometer range of 5-100 μm3 by spatial and spectral filtering. The correspondi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied optics (2004) 2012-05, Vol.51 (13), p.2333-2340 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The light of a light-emitting diode or a common thermal source, such as a tungsten filament lamp, is known to be quasi-incoherent. We generated partially coherent light of these sources with a volume of coherence in the micrometer range of 5-100 μm3 by spatial and spectral filtering. The corresponding degree of partial coherence was adapted for microscopic interference setups, such as a digital in-line holographic microscope. The practicability of the sources was determined by the spectral emittance and the resulting signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the detector. The microscale coherence in correlation with the SNR and its resolution for microscopy were analyzed. We demonstrate how low-light-level, non-laser sources enable holographic imaging with a video frame rate (25 frames/s), an intermediate SNR of 8 dB, and a volume of coherence of 3.4×10(4) μm3. Holograms of objects with a lateral resolution of 1 μm were achieved using a microscope lens (50×/NA=0.7) and a CCD camera featuring a 4-12 bit dynamic range. |
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ISSN: | 1559-128X 2155-3165 1539-4522 |
DOI: | 10.1364/AO.51.002333 |