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Computational image enhancement of multimode fibre-based holographic endo-microscopy: harnessing the muddy modes
Author(s) -
Tereza Tučková,
Martin Šiler,
Dirk E. Boonzajer Flaes,
Petr Jákl,
Sergey Turtaev,
Stanislav Krátký,
Rainer Heintzmann,
Hana Uhlı́řová,
Tomáš Čižmár
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.434848
Subject(s) - optics , speckle pattern , holography , wavefront , microscopy , multi mode optical fiber , stray light , lens (geology) , materials science , optical sectioning , focus (optics) , physics , optical fiber
In imaging geometries, which employ wavefront-shaping to control the light transport through a multi-mode optical fibre (MMF), this terminal hair-thin optical component acts as a minimally invasive objective lens, enabling high resolution laser-scanning fluorescence microscopy inside living tissues at depths hardly accessible by any other light-based technique. Even in the most advanced systems, the diffraction-limited foci scanning the object across the focal plane are contaminated by a stray optical signal carrying typically few tens of % of the total optical power. The stray illumination takes the shape of a randomised but reproducible speckle, and is unique for each position of the focus. We experimentally demonstrate that the performance of imaging a fluorescent object can be significantly improved, when resulting images are computationally post-processed, utilising records of intensities of all speckle-contaminated foci used in the imaging procedure. We present two algorithms based on a regularised iterative inversion and regularised direct pseudo-inversion respectively which lead to enhancement of the image contrast and resolution.

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