This application claims foreign priority based on Japanese Patent application No. 2006-048339, filed Feb. 24, 2006, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a confocal microscope, and more particularly, to a method for adjusting the confocal microscope, which eliminates occurrence of synchronous fringes (moiré fringes) during observation of a sample.
2. Description of the Related Art
A confocal microscope is for observing a sample by scanning a point of collected light on the sample through use of a laser (hereinafter called as a light beam for optical image measurement) and making fluorescent light that returns from the sample form an image. The confocal microscope is used for observing physiological reaction and morphology of live cells in the fields of biology, biotechnology, and the like, or for observing the surface of an LSI (large scale integration) in the field of semiconductors, etc.
The sample gives fluorescent light by radiation of the light beam 4 for image measurement. The fluorescent light returned from the sample again passes through the objective lens 10, and is collected onto the individual pinholes 9 of the Nipkow disk 8. The returned fluorescent light having passed through the individual pinholes is reflected by the dichroic mirror 7, and is imaged by an image sensor 13 (CCD: charge coupled device) via a relay lens 12.
In such an apparatus, the microlens array disk 5 and the Nipkow disk 8 are coaxially rotated at a given speed by a motor which is not shown, and the point of collected light on the sample is scanned by a movement of the pinholes 9 induced by the rotation.
The surface of the Nipkow disk 8 where the pinholes 9 are arranged, a surface to be observed on the sample, and a light-receiving face of the image sensor 13 are arranged in an optically conjugate relationship. Accordingly, an optical cross-sectional view of the sample, namely, a confocal image, is formed on the image sensor 13. Details of the confocal microscope of a Nipkow disk type are described in JP-A-5-60980.
JP-A-5-60980 describes a confocal optical scanner, in which imaging characteristic is enhanced and stray light from the pinhole surface is reduced.
Incidentally, in such a confocal microscope, the pinholes thoroughly scan over the screen that is displayed via the image sensor to create one screen every time the pinhole disk rotates for 30°.
For instance, when the disk is rotating at 5000 rpm, the time required to create one screen is computed as 1 ms in accordance with the following equation; specifically,
5000 rpm/60 seconds=83.33 rps
Frame rate=83.33*12=1000 fps (1000 frames per second)
Frame cycle= 1/1000 fps=1 ms
During observation of an image by using the confocal microscope, when an exposure time of the camera becomes shorter (100 ms or less, particularly, a video rate of 33 ms or less), circular-arc lateral fringes called synchronous fringes, such as those shown in
There are an equiangular spiral layout, a square layout, a constant pitch spiral layout and the like, as ways of arranging pinholes. The arrangement of the pinholes used in the present invention is the constant pitch spiral layout such as that shown in
When an NTSC (National Television System Committee) camera is used, there is prepared a mechanism for inputting a video composite signal of the camera to a synchronous input terminal of the confocal microscope to thus synchronize the rotation of a disk. However, in the case of a CCD digital camera which performs non-interlace imaging, an effective mechanism for synchronizing the rotation of the disk is not available.
The present invention has been made in view of the above circumstances, and provides a method for eliminating synchronous fringes by obtaining an optimum number of rotation from an exposure time through computation and setting the number of rotation in a confocal scanner unit (CSU) through use of an rpm (number of rotation) setting command or the like, to thus set the optimum number of rotation of the pinhole disk of the confocal microscope.
The present invention provides, a method for adjusting a confocal microscope which includes a microscope unit and a confocal scanner unit of Nipkow disk type, emits a light beam for image measurement on a sample, images a returned fluorescent light of the light beam by a CCD (charge-coupled device) digital camera as a confocal image, and enables observation of the sample by the confocal image, the method comprising:
matching a phase of rotation of the Nipkow disk with a phase of an exposure time of the CCD digital camera.
In the method for adjusting a confocal microscope, a time (s) required to create one screen of the confocal image is obtained by the following equation:
s=60/(a number of the rotation of the Nipkow disk*12),
wherein a unit of the time (s) is second.
In the method for adjusting a confocal microscope, provided that an integration number is an integral multiple (n times) of the time (s) required to create one screen, the exposure time (t) is obtained by the following equation:
t=(the integration number)*(the time (s) required to create one screen).
In the method for adjusting a confocal microscope, the number (f) of the rotation of the Nipkow disk after the exposure time (t) is determined is obtained by the following equation:
f=5/{(the exposure time (t))/(the integration number (n))}.
In the method for adjusting a confocal microscope, a number of the rotation of the Nipkow disk is equal to or more than 1500 rpm and less than 5000 rpm.
In the method for adjusting a confocal microscope, the phase of the rotation of the Nipkow disk and the phase of the exposure time of the CCD digital camera are set by communication using an external device.
The method for adjusting a confocal microscope, wherein the phase of the rotation of the Nipkow disk and the phase of the exposure time of the CCD digital camera are set, and
a waiting time is provided after an image transfer time.
The present invention will be described in detail hereunder.
First, a time (s) required to create one screen is obtained from a number of rotation of a Nipkow disk by the following equation.
s=60/(number of rotation of Nipkow disk*12) (1)
In order to delete synchronous fringes, an exposure time (t) is set so as to be an integral multiple (n times) of the time (s) required to create one screen. This “n” is called as an integration number.
Exposure time (t)=integration number (n)×time required to create one screen (s) (2)
The optimum number of rotation (f) achieved when the exposure time has been determined can be obtained by the following equation.
Number of rotation (f)=5/{(exposure time/integration number)} (3)
Here, the number of rotations per minute has to range from 1500 rpm to less than 5000 rpm.
Namely, 1500≦number of rotation (rpm)<5000
When the number of rotation is selected in the above requirement so that Equations (1), (2) and (3) are satisfied, the number of rotation approaches an integral, and the integration number is large, an image in which synchronous fringes do not exist can be acquired.
When the integration number is set to 7, the number of rotation is determined as follows in accordance with Equation (3).
Number of rotation (f)=5/(0.024/7)=1458.3
Accordingly, a requirement of 1500≦number of rotation (rpm) is not satisfied. Moreover, when the integration number is set to 24, the number of rotation (f) is determined as follows.
Number of rotation (f)=5/(0.024/24)=5000
Accordingly, a requirement of the number of rotation (rpm)<5000 is not satisfied.
Advantages of the present invention will now be described by reference to
1) In order to minimize synchronous fringes resulting from transfer of an image of a CCD camera, a reading speed is set to a low speed.
2) A sample is not placed on the stage of the confocal microscope shown in
3) White images are taken while the number of rotation of the Nipkow disk is changed to a minimum value, a maximum value, an optimum value, an optimum value +2, an optimum value +4 and an arbitrary speed, and the appeared synchronous fringes are observed.
4) All of the images are converted into 16-bit TIFF images. Values of a defined area in the row direction thereof are plotted to spreadsheet software, to thus determine a standard deviation of the data. The standard deviation that is smaller than other standard deviations is determined to be effective.
It is conceivable that a result in which the standard deviation and a value obtained by dividing the standard deviation by the average value are smaller is effective. Although the maximum number of rotation, 4999 rpm, has a small standard deviation, practically the disk is rotated at the optimum number of rotation (4375 rpm) in consideration of the life of the motor and that of the Nipkow disk.
In the drawing, the brightness level of 1500 rpm shows large vertical swings, and that synchronous fringes are prone to appear. Further, the drawing shows that vertical swings are small and synchronous fringes are less likely to appear at 3000 rpm to 4999 rpm.
Specifically, in
The CCD digital camera transfers the image to the PC in accordance with condition settings (the exposure time, the transfer time, gain and the like) transmitted from the PC, whereby the CSU 1 rotates at optimum conditions without generating synchronous fringes.
In
Incidentally, when the number of rotation of the Nipkow disk is set to an optimum number of rotation, the exposure time of the camera is set while the phase is synchronized, and images are displayed in time order, there arises a phenomenon that fringes appeared on the screen moves upwardly (or downwardly) as a rotating lamp.
Next will be described a case where such a phenomenon of flow of synchronous fringes is captured in a single image by double integration (30°*2).
In the case of a non-interlace camera, the exposure time (60°) is followed by a transfer time (20°). Therefore, as shown in
Consequently, as shown in
As is evident from the above descriptions, according to the method of the present invention for adjusting the confocal microscope in which a sample is observed, the phase of the rotation of the Nipkow disk and the phase of the exposure time of the CCD digital camera are matched, and the rotation of a disk of the confocal scanner unit is set to an optimal value. Accordingly, imaging synchronous fringes of a CCD digital camera can be eliminated. Moreover, as a result of the phase of the rotation of the Nipkow disk being matched with the phase of the exposure time of the CCD digital camera, flow of synchronous fringes can be prevented.
The above descriptions merely shows a specific preferred embodiment for the purpose of explanation and illustration of the present invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to the embodiment described above and encompasses additional alterations and modifications without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2006-048339 | Feb 2006 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6191885 | Kitagawa | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6281657 | Matsuo | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6320185 | Matsuo | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6426835 | Endo et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
5060980 | Dec 1993 | JP |
9-297267 | Nov 1997 | JP |
2000-275542 | Oct 2000 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070216999 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |