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Spinning-Disk Microscopy Systems
Author(s) -
Tony Wilson
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
cold spring harbor protocols
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.674
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1940-3402
pISSN - 1559-6095
DOI - 10.1101/pdb.top88
Subject(s) - microscope , confocal , optics , focus (optics) , optical microscope , confocal microscopy , volume (thermodynamics) , microscopy , computer science , optical sectioning , materials science , computer vision , computer graphics (images) , artificial intelligence , physics , scanning electron microscope , quantum mechanics
The popularity of the confocal microscope in life science laboratories around the world is undoubtedly due to its ability to permit volume objects to be imaged and to be rendered in three dimensions. It is important to realize that the confocal microscope itself does not produce three-dimensional images. Indeed, it does the opposite. The critical property that the confocal microscope possesses, which the conventional microscope does not, is its ability to image efficiently (and in-focus) only those regions of a volume specimen that lie within a thin section in the focal region of the microscope. In other words, it is able to reject (i.e., vastly attenuate) light originating from out-of-focus regions of the specimen. To image a three-dimensional volume of a thick specimen, it is necessary to take a whole series of such thin optical sections as the specimen is moved axially through the focal region. Once this through-focus series of optically sectioned images has been recorded, it is a matter of computer processing to decide how the three-dimensional information is to be presented. There are many methods for producing optical sections, of which the confocal optical system is just one. This article reviews these methods and describes a number of convenient methods of implementation that can lead to, among other things, real-time image formation.

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