Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Adaptive aberration correction in a confocal microscope

418

Citations

16

References

2002

Year

TLDR

Confocal microscopes enable optical sectioning for 3‑D imaging, yet system and specimen aberrations—especially with high‑NA lenses—degrade resolution and contrast, and adaptive optics can correct these but require new wavefront sensing tailored to the microscope’s optical system. The authors present an adaptive confocal fluorescence microscope that integrates a modal sensor with a deformable membrane mirror to correct aberrations. Their method directly measures Zernike aberration modes with axial selectivity akin to confocal imaging, allowing the sensor and mirror to compensate for aberrations in real time. The corrected images of biological specimens exhibit markedly higher contrast and apparent restoration of axial resolution.

Abstract

The main advantage of confocal microscopes over their conventional counterparts is their ability to optically “section” thick specimens; the thin image slices thus obtained can be used to reconstruct three-dimensional images, a capability which is particularly useful in biological applications. However, it is well known that the resolution and optical sectioning ability can be severely degraded by system or specimen-induced aberrations. The use of high aperture lenses further exacerbates the problem. Moreover, aberrations can considerably reduce the number of photons that reach the detector, leading to lower contrast. It is rather unfortunate, therefore, that in practical microscopy, aberration-free confocal imaging is rarely achieved. Adaptive optics systems, which have been used widely to correct aberrations in astronomy, offer a solution here but also present new challenges. The optical system and the source of aberrations in a confocal microscope are considerably different and require a novel approach to wavefront sensing. This method, based upon direct measurement of Zernike aberration modes, also exhibits an axial selectivity similar to that of a confocal microscope. We demonstrate an adaptive confocal fluorescence microscope incorporating this modal sensor together with a deformable membrane mirror for aberration correction. Aberration corrected images of biological specimens show considerable improvement in contrast and apparent restoration of axial resolution.

References

YearCitations

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