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1.
Appl Opt ; 55(21): 5666-83, 2016 Jul 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27463923

RESUMO

In this work, we investigate, both theoretically and experimentally, single-wavelength and multiwavelength digital holographic microscopy (DHM) using telecentric and nontelecentric configurations in transmission and reflection modes. A single-wavelength telecentric imaging system in DHM was originally proposed to circumvent the residual parabolic phase distortion due to the microscope objective (MO) in standard nontelecentric DHM configurations. However, telecentric configurations cannot compensate for higher order phase aberrations. As an extension to the telecentric and nontelecentric arrangements in single-wavelength DHM (SW-DHM), we propose multiple-wavelength telecentric DHM (MW-TDHM) in reflection and transmission modes. The advantages of MW-TDHM configurations are to extend the vertical measurement range without phase ambiguity and optically remove the parabolic phase distortion caused by the MO in traditional MW-DHM. These configurations eliminate the need for a second reference hologram to subtract the two-phase maps and make digital automatic aberration compensation easier to apply compared to nontelecentric configurations. We also discuss a reconstruction algorithm that eliminates the zero-order and virtual images using spatial filtering and another algorithm that minimizes the intensity of fluctuations using apodization. In addition, we employ two polynomial models using 2D surface fitting to compensate digitally for chromatic aberration (in the multiwavelength case) and for higher order phase aberrations. A custom-developed user-friendly graphical user interface is employed to automate the reconstruction processes for all configurations. Finally, TDHM is used to visualize cells from the highly invasive MDA-MB-231 cultured breast cancer cells.

2.
Appl Opt ; 54(6): 1443-52, 2015 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25968212

RESUMO

Fresnel transform implementation methods using numerical preprocessing techniques are investigated in this paper. First, it is shown that up-sampling dramatically reduces the minimum reconstruction distance requirements and allows maximal signal recovery by eliminating aliasing artifacts which typically occur at distances much less than the Rayleigh range of the object. Second, zero-padding is employed to arbitrarily scale numerical resolution for the purpose of resolution matching multiple holograms, where each hologram is recorded using dissimilar geometric or illumination parameters. Such preprocessing yields numerical resolution scaling at any distance. Both techniques are extensively illustrated using experimental results.

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