Title: Optics
1Optics Image Formation
- October 6, 2008
- Overview of Microscopy
- Dr. Behonick
2Topics for today
- Components of light microscopes
- Illumination
- Köehler Illumination
- Optics
- Numerical aperture
- Diffraction
- Resolution
- Optical path length
- DIC
- Image Formation
- Dynamic range
- Histograms
- Saturation
3Components of light microscopes
4What all the writing on the objective means
5What all the writing on the objective means
- optical tubelength of microscope (in mm)
- tubelength of microscope for which objective is
intended - tubelength distance from nosepiece opening
where objective mounted to top edge of
observation tubes (where ocular eyepieces mounted)
6What all the writing on the objective means
- coverglass thickness for which objective is
corrected (in mm) - designation - objective performance
independent of coverglass thickness - planochromat objective
- normal achromatic correction
- also corrected to eliminate/reduce field
curvature - field curvature optical aberration due to focal
plane being spherical rather than planar
apparent bending of field of view
7What all the writing on the objective means
- N.A. (numerical aperture)
- dimensionless number that characterizes range of
angles over which system can accept or emit light - takes into account refractive index of medium in
which lens is working (e.g. - air vs. oil)
maximum cone of light that can enter/exit lens - indicates resolving power of lens
- larger N.A. collects more light, brigter image
better resolution of fine details - ratio of objective's magnification to N.A can
predict performance of objective
8What all the writing on the objective means
water immersion objective
objective magnification
objective N.A.
coverglass thickness (mm) for which objective
is corrected
optical tubelength of microscope (mm)
9Review Components to Know
oculars
iris diaphragm
nosepiece/ turret
objectives
coarse focus
fine focus
stage
condenser
stage controls
light source
field diaphragm
rheostat
10Illumination
11Köehler Illumination
- why?
- proper alignment of illumination source for
transmitted light microscopy - aligning condenser lens to ensure
- optimal resolution
- even lighting of image (consistently lit
throughout) - no contrast artifacts
12Köehler Illumination
- Moderately close field diaphragm (displayed
unsharp) - Focus diaphragm image by slightly raising or
lowering the condenser - Center diaphragm image in field of view using
condenser positioning screws - Open field diaphragm so it just disappears from
field of view - Adjust contrast using aperature diaphragm. If
specimen is of moderate contrast, about 2/3 of
rear lens element of objective should be
illuminated
13Optics
14Numerical aperture
15Numerical Aperture (NA)
- tells you how much of light cone objective can
gather - important consideration in resolution
cone of light
16NA
- NA n (sin f)
- n refractive index of medium between coverslip
front lens of objective - f 1/2 angle of cone of light
- (i.e. 1/2 angular aperture)
17Optimal NA
NA n (sin f)
- AIR
- n 1.0
- ? NA of 1 is theoretical max for dry lenses (.95
is real max) - OIL
- n 1.5
- ? NA of 1.5 is theoretical max for oil immersion
lenses (1.46 is real max)
18NA and magnification
NA n (sin f)
- as magnification increases, f increases so NA
increases (while focal length decreases)
Note the 1/2 angle can be referred to as f, a, m
etc.
19NA and magnification
20NA and magnification
21NA and LOW magnification
light rays
22NA and MID magnification
light rays
23NA and HIGH magnification
light rays
24Tradeoffs
- high magnification, oil objective
- best NA, so best spatial resolution
- most brightness
- tradeoffs less contrast, less field of view,
less depth of field
25NA
- magnification NA both important for resolution
- objective w/ high NA can have more resolving
power than one with more magnification but
smaller NA - example
- 63x 1.4 NA objective resolution .24 mm
- 100x 1.3 NA objective resolution .26 mm
- Murphy, page 54 Table 4
26NA Köehlering
- closing iris (condenser) diaphragm decreases NA
of condenser - tradeoff contrast vs. resolution
- open condensor diapraghm
- more effective NA
- more resolution
- less contrast
- less depth of focus
- closing it down has opposite effects
- general starting point 2/3 open
27NA
- rule of thumb
- magnification should be 500-1000x NA
- more than that is empty magnification
28Diffraction
29Abbes theory of image formation
- The microscope image is the interference effect
of a diffraction phenomenon
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Diffraction of waves
33Diffraction
- diffraction pattern through 2 slits gives striped
image - why?
- constructive destructive interference between
waves
34Diffraction
35Diffraction of light
- light from point source passing through aperture
diffracts - aperture can be eye or objective
- pattern of diffraction Airy disk (or point
spread function, PSF)
images from http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/ind
ex.html
36Airy Discs Spatial Resolution
- smaller Airy disc, better spatial resolution
- resolution ability to distinguish 2 spots as
separate
37Airy Discs Spatial Resolution
- big airy discs so we cant resolve these 2 spots
38Airy Discs Spatial Resolution
- smaller airy discs so we can resolve the same 2
spots
39Airy Discs Spatial Resolution
- How do we get a smaller Airy disc (for better
resolution)? - increase NA of objective!
- n.b. - increasing magnification also helps
40Airy Discs Spatial Resolution
- low NA
- bigger Airy
- lower resolution
- high NA
- smaller Airy
- higher resolution
41NA Airy Disc Size
smaller Airy/ better resolution
more magnification/NA
42Airy tutorial
- http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/imageforma
tion/rayleighdisks/index.html
43Resolution
44Rayleigh Criterion
- 2 spots resolvable when they meet Rayleigh
criterion - Airy disk of 1 spot overlaps w/ 1st order
diffraction ring of other spot - theyll be separated by distance (d) equal to
radius of Airy disk - Murphy, page 87
- http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/imageforma
tion/rayleighdisks/
45Rayleigh Limit
OK
Too close
46Resolving Power
- can use Rayleigh limit to define best possible
resolving power for an objective - d 0.61 ?/NAobj
- d minimum resolved distance in mm
- when condenser NA gt objective NA
- n.b. - 0.61 has to do with the geometry of
circles!
47Resolving Power
- d 1.22 ?/Nacond NAobj
- d minimum resolved distance in mm
- when condenser NA lt objective NA
48Optical path length
49Optical Path
Imagine tracing the wave as it goes up and down
how far overall did you go?
end here
start here
50Optical Path
- OPL (optical path length) nd
- n refractive index
- d distance traveled
- n.b. - distance traveled (d) determined by
thickness of specimen - ? thickness of specimen material it is made of
(n) both contribute to OPL of transmitted light - Murphy, pages 68-69
51Optical Path
Two specimens of same thickness, different
n. Which has the longer OPL?
bigger n
A
B
52Optical Path
- bigger n ? longer OPL
- thicker specimen ? longer OPL
- OPL also wavelength dependant
53Optical Path
- Consider optical path of light wavefronts through
slide w/ specimen in aqueous solution
direction of light
54Optical Path
- Consider optical path of light wavefronts through
slide w/ specimen in aqueous solution
different optical path lengths!
direction of light
55Optical Path
- Differences in optical path (D) can readout as
contrast
t
D (n1-n2) t
n1
n2
direction of light
56Optical Path
- differences in optical path (OPD) are used by
contrast-generating techniques such as DIC
phase - Interactive
- http//www.microscopyu.com/tutorials/java/phaseco
ntrast/phasespecimens/index.html - http//www.microscopyu.com/tutorials/java/phaseco
ntrast/opticalpathlength/index.html
n1
57DIC
58Differential Interference Contrast
- a.k.a. - Nomarski
- turns gradients in optical path into gradients in
intensity, generating contrast - Murphy, pages 153-156
n1
59DIC
- looks 3D, but be careful when interpreting the
images! - when you see contrast, you are seeing some
combination of differences in n /or differences
in thickness - ? best for regions w/ gradients in n thickness
- e.g. - edge of cell or organelle.
- n.b. - cant use plastic dishes
n1
60DIC
http//www.microscopyu.com/
615) a polar selects components so interference
can occur
4) recombines light
3) phase shifts/optical path differences occur
2) splits the light
1) polarizes light
image from http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/inde
x.html
62DIC
http//www.microscopyu.com/
63Image formation
64- focal plane flat plane perpendicular to optical
axis onto which lens focuses image - optical axis path along which light propagates
through system
65- focal length distance from center of lens to
focal point how strongly optical system
focuses/diffuses light - shorter focal length ? greater optical power
- convex lens positive focal length
- concave lens negative focal length
66Dynamic Range
67Dynamic Range
- Dynamic range (DR) difference between dimmest
brightest value of steps in between - i.e. - of grey levels
- grey levels due to intensity of signal
- more signal ? lighter
- less signal ? darker
- Murphy, page 274
68Bit Depth in CCD Cameras
- CCD charge coupled device (way image signal is
read out from chip) - of grey levels (different intensities) depends
on bit depth - bit depth bits used to represent color of a
single pixel in image - 4 bits 16 levels
- 8 bits 256 levels
- 10 bits 1024 levels
- 12 bits 4,096
- 16 bits 65,536
- 0 black max value white
69Bit Depth
- bit depth property of ADC (analog to digital
converter, a.k.a the digitizer) of CCD camera - microscopy CCD cameras tend to be 8, 10, or 12
bit cameras
70Dynamic Range Bit Depth
- consider DR bit depth camera can deliver
- n.b. - computer monitor or printer may be only 8
bits - even if display has few grey levels, take
original image w/ many grey levels (for
quantification, mathmatical processing by
software, etc.) - Murphy, page 275
71Histograms
72Histogram
- representation of dynamic range of your system
where particular image falls w/in that dynamic
range - want to optimize image to use full dynamic range
w/o saturating any pixels
of pixels
0 black
top value white
73Examples
- not optimal (not using full DR)
of pixels
- much better (uses most of DR)
of pixels
74Saturation
75Saturation
- can occur _at_ either end of dynamic range
- in saturated pixels you can no longer distinguish
between different grey levels - ? you are losing data!
- use histogram to figure this out
- if there are a lot of black or white pixels, you
have probably saturated that end of dynamic range
76Saturation Rules
- optimally, you should avoid saturation _at_ either
end of DR - you can decide to let dark pixels be slightly
saturated if you think there is no info in them,
but make a note of it in your image log. usually
dark pixels are background in a fluorescence
image - you rarely want to saturate bright pixels in a
fluorescence image since that is your data
77Saturation
78Saturation
these pixels are lumped in together as white
these pixels are lumped in together as black
79Saturation
info is lost
- why you dont want to saturate
80References
- Giorgi, G. Lecture 9. Merritt College Biology
035, 27 March 2008. - Giorgi, G. Lecture 10. Merritt College Biology
035, 1 April 2008. - Objective Markings What they mean.
Micrographia. 1 Oct 2008. lthttp//www.micrographia
.com/tutoria/micbasic/micbpt02/micb0200/objmrk01.h
tmgt