Ah, physics. The cold, hard reality of how things work so often gets in the way of how we would prefer them to work.
But when it comes to the field of microscopy, which has been held
back by the physical limitations of optical lenses, a group of engineers
at Caltech say they've been able to use a computational approach to bypass these limitations
-- and that the final images produced using their new system contain
100 times more information. What's more, the system costs just $200 to
implement with a conventional microscope.
In a nutshell, the limitations of optical lenses have forced
researchers to pick and choose between a system that gives them high
resolution over a small field of view or low resolution over a wider
field of view. See a little bit clearly or a lot coarsely.
"We found a way to actually have the best of both worlds," Guoan Zheng, lead author of the new paper in Nature Photonics,
said in a school news release. "The optical performance of the
objective lens is rendered almost irrelevant, as we can improve the
resolution and correct for aberrations computationally."
Take that, physics!
Ultimately, the researchers were able to improve the resolution of a
conventional 2X objective lens to the level of a 20X -- so they combined
the larger field-of-view advantage of the 2X lens with the resolution
of the 20X lens -- for just $200. They achieved this by taking 150
low-res images of a sample, corresponding each image to an LED element
in an LED array, and then using a novel computational approach called
Fourier ptychographic microscopy, stitching together the low-res images
to form high-res intensity, resulting in a far more complete picture of
what is available across the entire light field of the sample.
Changhuei Yang, professor of electrical engineering, bioengineering
and medical engineering at Caltech, says that we can only sense
variations in intensity when looking at light from an object, but that
light actually varies not only in intensity but in its phase -- and that
phase is related to the angle at which light travels. By teasing out
both the intensity and the phase of the light field across low-res
images, they are able to "correct for optical aberration issues that
otherwise confound your ability to resolve objects well."
"One big advantage of this new approach is the hardware compatibility," Zheng added. "You only need to add an LED array to an existing microscope. No other hardware modification is needed. The rest of the job is done by the computer."
SOURCE: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-57596246-1/turning-a-regular-microscope-into-billion-pixel-imaging-system/
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