366 research outputs found
Shot Noise in Digital Holography
We discuss on noise in heterodyne holography in an off-axis configuration. We
show that, for a weak signal, the noise is dominated by the shot noise on the
reference beam. This noise corresponds to an equivalent noise on the signal
beam of one photoelectron per pixel, for the whole sequence of images used to
build the digital hologram
In vivo laser Doppler holography of the human retina
The eye offers a unique opportunity for non-invasive exploration of
cardiovascular diseases. Optical angiography in the retina requires sensitive
measurements, which hinders conventional full-field laser Doppler imaging
schemes. To overcome this limitation, we used digital holography to perform
laser Doppler perfusion imaging of the human retina in vivo with near-infrared
light. Wideband measurements of the beat frequency spectrum of optical
interferograms recorded with a 39 kHz CMOS camera are analyzed by short-time
Fourier transformation. Power Doppler images and movies drawn from the zeroth
moment of the power spectrum density reveal blood flows in retinal and
choroidal vessels over 512 512 pixels covering 2.4 2.4 mm
on the retina with a 13 ms temporal resolution.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Imaging Gold Nanoparticles in Living Cells Environments using Heterodyne Digital Holographic Microscopy
This paper describes an imaging microscopic technique based on heterodyne
digital holography where subwavelength-sized gold colloids can be imaged in
cell environment. Surface cellular receptors of 3T3 mouse fibroblasts are
labeled with 40 nm gold nanoparticles, and the biological specimen is imaged in
a total internal reflection configuration with holographic microscopy. Due to a
higher scattering efficiency of the gold nanoparticles versus that of cellular
structures, accurate localization of a gold marker is obtained within a 3D
mapping of the entire sample's scattered field, with a lateral precision of 5
nm and 100 nm in the x,y and in the z directions respectively, demonstrating
the ability of holographic microscopy to locate nanoparticles in living cells
environments
Imaging of a vibrating object by Sideband Digital Holography
We obtain quantitative measurements of the oscillation amplitude of vibrating
objects by using sideband digital holography. The frequency sidebands on the
light scattered by the object, shifted by n times the vibration frequency, are
selectively detected by heterodyne holography, and images of the object are
calculated for different orders n. Orders up to n=120 have been observed,
allowing the measurement of amplitudes of oscillation that are significantly
larger than the optical wavelength. Using the positions of the zeros of
intensity for each value of n, we reconstruct the shape of vibration the
object.Comment: 6 page
Compressed Sensing with off-axis frequency-shifting holography
This work reveals an experimental microscopy acquisition scheme successfully
combining Compressed Sensing (CS) and digital holography in off-axis and
frequency-shifting conditions. CS is a recent data acquisition theory involving
signal reconstruction from randomly undersampled measurements, exploiting the
fact that most images present some compact structure and redundancy. We propose
a genuine CS-based imaging scheme for sparse gradient images, acquiring a
diffraction map of the optical field with holographic microscopy and recovering
the signal from as little as 7% of random measurements. We report experimental
results demonstrating how CS can lead to an elegant and effective way to
reconstruct images, opening the door for new microscopy applications.Comment: vol 35, pp 871-87
Pulsatile microvascular blood flow imaging by short-time Fourier transform analysis of ultrafast laser holographic interferometry
We report on wide-field imaging of pulsatile microvascular blood flow in the
exposed cerebral cortex of a mouse by holographic interferometry. We recorded
interferograms of laser light backscattered by the tissue, beating against an
off-axis reference beam with a 50 kHz framerate camera. Videos of local Doppler
contrasts were rendered numerically by Fresnel transformation and short-time
Fourier transform analysis. This approach enabled instantaneous imaging of
pulsatile blood flow contrasts in superficial blood vessels over 256 x 256
pixels with a spatial resolution of 10 microns and a temporal resolution of 20
ms.Comment: 4 page
Short-time Fourier transform laser Doppler holography
We report a demonstration of laser Doppler holography at a sustained acquisition rate of 250 Hz on a 1 Megapixel complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) sensor array and image display at 10 Hz frame rate. The holograms are optically acquired in off-axis configuration, with a frequency-shifted reference beam. Wide-field imaging of optical fluctuations in a 250 Hz frequency band is achieved by turning time-domain samplings to the dual domain via short-time temporal Fourier transformation. The measurement band can be positioned freely within the low radio-frequency (RF) spectrum by tuning the frequency of the reference beam in real-time. Video-rate image rendering is achieved by streamline image processing with commodity computer graphics hardware. This experimental scheme is validated by a non-contact vibrometry experiment
Laser Doppler imaging of microflow
We report results obtained with a wide-field laser Doppler detection
scheme used to perform laser Doppler anemometry and imaging of
particle-seeded microflow. The optical field carrying the local
scatterers (particles) dynamic state, as a consequence of momentum transfer at each scattering event, is analyzed in the temporal frequencies domain. The setup is based on heterodyne digital holography, which is used to map the scattered field in the object plane at a tunable frequency with a multipixel detector. We show that wide-field heterodyne laser Doppler imaging can be used for quantitative microflow diagnosis; in the presented study, maps of the first-order moment of the Doppler frequency shift are used as a quantitative and directional estimator of the Doppler signature of particles velocity
Digital holography with ultimate sensitivity
We propose a variant of the heterodyne holography scheme that combines the
properties of off-axis and phase-shifting holography. This scheme makes it
possible to filter off numerically the zero-order image alias and the technical
noise of the reference. It is then possible to record and reconstruct
holographic images at an extremely low signal level. We show experimentally
that the sensitivity of the method is limited only by the quantum nature of
photons.Comment: 3 page
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