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Single-pulse CARS based multimodal nonlinear optical microscope for bioimaging
Author(s) -
Sunil Kumar,
Tschackad Kamali,
Jonathan M. Levitte,
Ori Katz,
Boris Hermann,
René M. Werkmeister,
Boris Považay,
Wolfgang Drexler,
Angelika Unterhuber,
Yaron Silberberg
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.23.013082
Subject(s) - optics , microscope , optical coherence tomography , femtosecond , materials science , laser , biological imaging , microscopy , second harmonic imaging microscopy , high harmonic generation , second harmonic generation , biophotonics , optical microscope , physics , scanning electron microscope , fluorescence
Noninvasive label-free imaging of biological systems raises demand not only for high-speed three-dimensional prescreening of morphology over a wide-field of view but also it seeks to extract the microscopic functional and molecular details within. Capitalizing on the unique advantages brought out by different nonlinear optical effects, a multimodal nonlinear optical microscope can be a powerful tool for bioimaging. Bringing together the intensity-dependent contrast mechanisms via second harmonic generation, third harmonic generation and four-wave mixing for structural-sensitive imaging, and single-beam/single-pulse coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering technique for chemical sensitive imaging in the finger-print region, we have developed a simple and nearly alignment-free multimodal nonlinear optical microscope that is based on a single wide-band Ti:Sapphire femtosecond pulse laser source. Successful imaging tests have been realized on two exemplary biological samples, a canine femur bone and collagen fibrils harvested from a rat tail. Since the ultra-broad band-width femtosecond laser is a suitable source for performing high-resolution optical coherence tomography, a wide-field optical coherence tomography arm can be easily incorporated into the presented multimodal microscope making it a versatile optical imaging tool for noninvasive label-free bioimaging.

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