Ultraviolet hyperspectral microscopy using chromatic-aberration-based iterative phase recovery
Ultraviolet (UV) microscopy has recently re-emerged as an important label-free, molecular imaging technique. This stems from the unique UV absorption properties of many endogenous biomolecules that play a critical role in cell structure and function. However, broadband hyperspectral imaging in this...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Optics letters 2020-05, Vol.45 (10), p.2708-2711 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Ultraviolet (UV) microscopy has recently re-emerged as an important label-free, molecular imaging technique. This stems from the unique UV absorption properties of many endogenous biomolecules that play a critical role in cell structure and function. However, broadband hyperspectral imaging in this spectral region is challenging due to strong chromatic aberrations inherent in UV systems. Here we apply an intensity-based, two-stage, iterative phase-recovery algorithm that leverages the same chromatic aberrations to overcome this challenge. Importantly, knowledge of samples' dispersion or absorption properties is not required. We demonstrate that the computationally retrieved phase can be applied to digitally refocus images across a large bandwidth. This enables hyperspectral UV imaging with a simple microscope for quantitative molecular analysis. We validate this method through simulations and through experiments with red blood cells. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America |
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ISSN: | 0146-9592 1539-4794 |
DOI: | 10.1364/OL.392634 |