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The point‐spread function of a confocal microscope: its measurement and use in deconvolution of 3‐D data
Author(s) -
Shaw Peter J.,
Rawlins David J.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of microscopy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.569
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1365-2818
pISSN - 0022-2720
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2818.1991.tb03168.x
Subject(s) - deconvolution , optics , confocal , microscope , point spread function , detector , aperture (computer memory) , optical transfer function , materials science , resolution (logic) , physics , computer science , artificial intelligence , acoustics
SUMMARY We have measured the point‐spread function (PSF) for an MRC‐500 confocal scanning laser microscope using subresolution fluorescent beads. PSFs were measured for two lenses of high numerical aperture—the Zeiss plan‐neofluar 63 × water immersion and Leitz plan‐apo 63 × oil immersion—at three different sizes of the confocal detector aperture. The measured PSFs are fairly symmetrical, both radially and axially. In particular there is considerably less axial asymmetry than has been demonstrated in measurements of conventional (non‐confocal) PSFs. Measurements of the peak width at half‐maximum peak height for the minimum detector aperture gave approximately 0·23 and 0·8 μm for the radial and axial resolution respectively (4·6 and 15·9 in dimensionless optical units). This increased to 0·38 and 1·5 μm (7·5 and 29·8 in dimensionless units) for the largest detector aperture examined. The resulting optical transfer functions (OTFs) were used in an iterative, constrained deconvolution procedure to process three‐dimensional confocal data sets from a biological specimen—pea root cells labelled in situ with a fluorescent probe to ribosomal genes. The deconvolution significantly improved the clarity and contrast of the data. Furthermore, the loss in resolution produced by increasing the size of the detector aperture could be restored by the deconvolution procedure. Therefore for many biological specimens which are only weakly fluorescent it may be preferable to open the detector aperture to increase the strength of the detected signal, and thus the signal‐to‐noise ratio, and then to restore the resolution by deconvolution.

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