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Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes

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Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes. / Kosmeier, Sebastian; Zolotovskaya, Svetlana A.; De Luca, Anna Ciara et al.
In: Optica, Vol. 1, No. 4, 2014, p. 257-263.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kosmeier, S, Zolotovskaya, SA, De Luca, AC, Riches, A, Herrington, CS, Dholakia, K & Mazilu, M 2014, 'Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes', Optica, vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 257-263. https://doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257

APA

Kosmeier, S., Zolotovskaya, S. A., De Luca, A. C., Riches, A., Herrington, C. S., Dholakia, K., & Mazilu, M. (2014). Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes. Optica, 1(4), 257-263. https://doi.org/10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257

Vancouver

Kosmeier S, Zolotovskaya SA, De Luca AC, Riches A, Herrington CS, Dholakia K et al. Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes. Optica. 2014;1(4):257-263. doi: 10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257

Author

Kosmeier, Sebastian ; Zolotovskaya, Svetlana A. ; De Luca, Anna Ciara et al. / Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes. In: Optica. 2014 ; Vol. 1, No. 4. pp. 257-263.

Bibtex

@article{62418bb12e6c487abe11c49e829446ea,
title = "Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes",
abstract = "Various forms of imaging schemes have emerged over the last decade that are based on correlating variations in incident illuminating light fields to the outputs of single “bucket” detectors. However, to date, the role of the orthogonality of the illumination fields has largely been overlooked, and, furthermore, the field has not progressed beyond bright field imaging. By exploiting the concept of orthogonal illuminating fields, we demonstrate the application of optical eigenmodes (OEis) to wide-field, scan-free spontaneous Raman imaging, which is notoriously slow in wide-field mode. The OEi approach enables a form of indirect imaging that exploits both phase and amplitude in image reconstruction. The use of orthogonality enables us to nonredundantly illuminate the sample and, in particular, use a subset of illuminating modes to obtain the majority of information from the sample, thus minimizing any photobleaching or damage of the sample. The crucial incorporation of phase, in addition to amplitude, in the imaging process significantly reduces background noise and results in an improved signal-to-noise ratio for the image while reducing the number of illuminations. As an example we can reconstruct images of a surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy sample with approximately an order of magnitude fewer acquisitions. This generic approach may readily be applied to other imaging modalities such as fluorescence microscopy or nonlinear vibrational microscopy.",
author = "Sebastian Kosmeier and Zolotovskaya, {Svetlana A.} and {De Luca}, {Anna Ciara} and Andrew Riches and Herrington, {C. Simon} and Kishan Dholakia and Michael Mazilu",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "257--263",
journal = "Optica",
publisher = "OSA Publishing",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nonredundant Raman imaging using optical eigenmodes

AU - Kosmeier, Sebastian

AU - Zolotovskaya, Svetlana A.

AU - De Luca, Anna Ciara

AU - Riches, Andrew

AU - Herrington, C. Simon

AU - Dholakia, Kishan

AU - Mazilu, Michael

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Various forms of imaging schemes have emerged over the last decade that are based on correlating variations in incident illuminating light fields to the outputs of single “bucket” detectors. However, to date, the role of the orthogonality of the illumination fields has largely been overlooked, and, furthermore, the field has not progressed beyond bright field imaging. By exploiting the concept of orthogonal illuminating fields, we demonstrate the application of optical eigenmodes (OEis) to wide-field, scan-free spontaneous Raman imaging, which is notoriously slow in wide-field mode. The OEi approach enables a form of indirect imaging that exploits both phase and amplitude in image reconstruction. The use of orthogonality enables us to nonredundantly illuminate the sample and, in particular, use a subset of illuminating modes to obtain the majority of information from the sample, thus minimizing any photobleaching or damage of the sample. The crucial incorporation of phase, in addition to amplitude, in the imaging process significantly reduces background noise and results in an improved signal-to-noise ratio for the image while reducing the number of illuminations. As an example we can reconstruct images of a surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy sample with approximately an order of magnitude fewer acquisitions. This generic approach may readily be applied to other imaging modalities such as fluorescence microscopy or nonlinear vibrational microscopy.

AB - Various forms of imaging schemes have emerged over the last decade that are based on correlating variations in incident illuminating light fields to the outputs of single “bucket” detectors. However, to date, the role of the orthogonality of the illumination fields has largely been overlooked, and, furthermore, the field has not progressed beyond bright field imaging. By exploiting the concept of orthogonal illuminating fields, we demonstrate the application of optical eigenmodes (OEis) to wide-field, scan-free spontaneous Raman imaging, which is notoriously slow in wide-field mode. The OEi approach enables a form of indirect imaging that exploits both phase and amplitude in image reconstruction. The use of orthogonality enables us to nonredundantly illuminate the sample and, in particular, use a subset of illuminating modes to obtain the majority of information from the sample, thus minimizing any photobleaching or damage of the sample. The crucial incorporation of phase, in addition to amplitude, in the imaging process significantly reduces background noise and results in an improved signal-to-noise ratio for the image while reducing the number of illuminations. As an example we can reconstruct images of a surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy sample with approximately an order of magnitude fewer acquisitions. This generic approach may readily be applied to other imaging modalities such as fluorescence microscopy or nonlinear vibrational microscopy.

U2 - 10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257

DO - 10.1364/OPTICA.1.000257

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

SP - 257

EP - 263

JO - Optica

JF - Optica

IS - 4

ER -