27 research outputs found

    3D full-wave multi-scattering forward solver for coherent microscopes

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    A rigorous forward model solver for conventional coherent microscope is presented. The forward model is derived from Maxwell’s equations and models the wave behaviour of light matter interaction. Vectorial waves and multiple-scattering effect are considered in this model. Scattered field can be calculated with given distribution of the refractive index of the biological sample. Bright field images can be obtained by combining the scattered field and reflected illumination, and experimental validation is included. Insights into the utility of the full-wave multi-scattering (FWMS) solver and comparison with the conventional Born approximation based solver are presented. The model is also generalizable to the other forms of label-free coherent microscopes, such as quantitative phase microscope and dark-field microscope

    Influence of laser spot size at diffuser plane on the longitudinal spatial coherence function of optical coherence microscopy system

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    Coherence properties and wavelength of light sources are indispensable for optical coherence microscopy/tomography as they greatly influence the signal to noise ratio, axial resolution, and penetration depth of the system. In the present letter, we investigated the longitudinal spatial coherence properties of the pseudo-thermal light source (PTS) as a function of spot size at the diffuser plane, which is controlled by translating microscope objective lens towards or away from the diffuser plane. The axial resolution of PTS is found to be maximum ~ 13 microns for the beam spot size of 3.5 mm at the diffuser plane. The change in the axial resolution of the system as the spot size is increased at the diffuser plane is further confirmed by performing experiments on standard gauge blocks of height difference of 15 microns. Thus, by appropriately choosing the beam spot size at the diffuser plane, any monochromatic laser light source depending on the biological window can be utilized to obtain high axial-resolution with large penetration depth and speckle-free tomographic images of multilayered biological specimens irrespective of the source temporal coherence length. In addition, PTS could be an attractive alternative light source for achieving high axial-resolution without needing chromatic aberration corrected optics and dispersion-compensation mechanism, unlike conventional setups.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1810.0199

    IR Based Home Appliances Control System

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    IR-Based Home Appliances Control System is a control system using which the user can control different home appliances with a remote controller. The remote controller can be used to switch on/off different home appliances like a light bulb, fan, television, etc. which are connected to the circuit. It can also be used to regulate the speed of the fan. It can be activated from up to 10 meters. It is easy to build and can be assembled on a general-purpose PCB.This paper proposes the use of Infrared Remote controller to control different home appliances. It consists of Infrared Remote controller and receiver, microcontroller and triac. In this, the Infrared Remote sends signals to change the state of a home appliance when the microcontroller receives the signal it performs its task i.e. to change the state of the appliance according to the corresponding signal received

    Characterization of color cross-talk of CCD detectors and its influence in multispectral quantitative phase imaging

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    Multi-spectral quantitative phase imaging (QPI) is an emerging imaging modality for wavelength dependent studies of several biological and industrial specimens. Simultaneous multi-spectral QPI is generally performed with color CCD cameras. However, color CCD cameras are suffered from the color crosstalk issue, which needed to be explored. Here, we present a new approach for accurately measuring the color crosstalk of 2D area detectors, without needing prior information about camera specifications. Color crosstalk of two different cameras commonly used in QPI, single chip CCD (1-CCD) and three chip CCD (3-CCD), is systematically studied and compared using compact interference microscopy. The influence of color crosstalk on the fringe width and the visibility of the monochromatic constituents corresponding to three color channels of white light interferogram are studied both through simulations and experiments. It is observed that presence of color crosstalk changes the fringe width and visibility over the imaging field of view. This leads to an unwanted non-uniform background error in the multi-spectral phase imaging of the specimens. It is demonstrated that the color crosstalk of the detector is the key limiting factor for phase measurement accuracy of simultaneous multi-spectral QPI systems.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure

    Scalable-resolution structured illumination microscopy

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    Structured illumination microscopy suffers from the need of sophisticated instrumentation and precise calibration. This makes structured illumination microscopes costly and skill-dependent. We present a novel approach to realize super-resolution structured illumination microscopy using an alignment non-critical illumination system and a reconstruction algorithm that does not need illumination information. The optical system is designed to encode higher order frequency components of the specimen by projecting PSF-modulated binary patterns for illuminating the sample plane, which do not have clean Fourier peaks conventionally used in structured illumination microscopy. These patterns fold high frequency content of sample into the measurements in an obfuscated manner, which are de-obfuscated using multiple signal classification algorithm. This algorithm eliminates the need of clean peaks in illumination and the knowledge of illumination patterns, which makes instrumentation simple and flexible for use with a variety of microscope objective lenses. We present a variety of experimental results on beads and cell samples to demonstrate resolution enhancement by a factor of 2.6 to 3.4 times, which is better than the enhancement supported by the conventional linear structure illumination microscopy where the same objective lens is used for structured illumination as well as collection of light. We show that the same system can be used in SIM configuration with different collection objective lenses without any careful re-calibration or realignment, thereby supporting a range of resolutions with the same system

    Effect on the longitudinal coherence properties of a pseudothermal light source as a function of source size and temporal coherence

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    © 2019 Optical Society of America. Users may use, reuse, and build upon the article, or use the article for text or data mining, so long as such uses are for non-commercial purposes and appropriate attribution is maintained. All other rights are reserved.In the present Letter, a synthesized pseudothermal light source having high temporal coherence (TC) and low spatial coherence (SC) properties is used. The longitudinal coherence (LC) properties of the spatially extended monochromatic light source are systematically studied. The pseudothermal light source is generated from two different monochromatic laser sources: He–Ne (at 632 nm) and DPSS (at 532 nm). It was found that the LC length of such a light source becomes independent of the parent laser’s TC length for a large source size. For the chosen lasers, the LC length becomes constant to about 30 μm for a laser source size of ≥3.3  mm ≥3.3  mm . Thus, by appropriately choosing the source size, any monochromatic laser light source depending on the biological window can be utilized to obtain high axial resolution in an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system irrespective of its TC length. The axial resolution of 650 nm was obtained using a 1.2 numerical aperture objective lens at a 632 nm wavelength. These findings pave the path for widespread penetration of pseudothermal light into existing OCT systems with enhanced performance. A pseudothermal light source with high TC and low SC properties could be an attractive alternative light source for achieving high axial resolution without needing dispersion compensation as compared to a broadband light source

    Taxonomy of hybridly polarized Stokes vortex beams

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    Structured beams carrying topological defects, namely phase and Stokes singularities, have gained extensive interest in numerous areas of optics. The non-separable spin and orbital angular momentum states of hybridly polarized Stokes singular beams provide additional freedom for manipulating optical fields. However, the characterization of hybridly polarized Stokes vortex beams remains challenging owing to the degeneracy associated with the complex polarization structures of these beams. In addition, experimental noise factors such as relative phase, amplitude, and polarization difference together with beam fluctuations add to the perplexity in the identification process. Here, we present a generalized diffraction-based Stokes polarimetry approach assisted with deep learning for efficient identification of Stokes singular beams. A total of 15 classes of beams are considered based on the type of Stokes singularity and their associated mode indices. The resultant total and polarization component intensities of Stokes singular beams after diffraction through a triangular aperture are exploited by the deep neural network to recognize these beams. Our approach presents a classification accuracy of 98.67% for 15 types of Stokes singular beams that comprise several degenerate cases. The present study illustrates the potential of diffraction of the Stokes singular beam with polarization transformation, modeling of experimental noise factors, and a deep learning framework for characterizing hybridly polarized beam
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