The present application claims priority benefit of German Application No. DE 10 2010 055 882.6 filed on Dec. 22, 2010, the contents of which are incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates generally to the field of confocal laser scanning microscopes and more particularly to the pinhole of such microscopes.
Confocal laser scanning microscopes are well known. A schematic diagram of such a microscope is illustrated in
The scanning unit S includes an optical collimating system 16, a path-folding mirror 17, a scanning objective lens 22, a scanner 23 and a main color beam splitter 24. Via an optical pinhole system 29 with a central pinhole (pinhole aperture) through which the detection light D travels, the light emitted by the specimen is passed into the detection unit C. Via a secondary color beam splitter 26, the light from the specimen is spectrally separated and guided via optical imaging systems 25 to a plurality of detectors 31.
In addition, or as an alternative, the microscope can also have a non-descanned detection unit NDD. In that case, light from the specimen passes via an NDD beam splitter 27 that is preferably disposed near the objective lens into the non-descanned detection unit NDD. The non-descanned detection unit can also be used in the transmitted light as known from the prior art (not shown).
This type of laser scanning microscope is also the subject matter of DE 197 02 753 A1. This document describes a plurality of detection pinholes in various individual beam paths downstream of a shared optical pinhole system, the diameter of which pinholes can be changed. Furthermore, to compensate for optical aberrations of the optical system of the microscope, these detection pinholes are designed so as to be axially and laterally controllable and movable relative to the detection beam.
To compensate for the aberrations of the optical system, other approaches have been proposed, e.g., adaptive optical systems or deformable mirrors (EP 929 826 B1).
According to the present invention, it was found that it is easier to make these corrections in the detector itself by creating a spatially resolving surface receiver in such a manner that, for example, preferably only the regions of the light-sensitive surface that also contribute to the image content are analyzed,
This will be the subject matter of the independent claims.
Preferred advanced embodiments will be the subject matter of the dependent claims.
In contrast to the prior art (CCD receiver matrices that are read out serially), the present invention proposes a detector matrix that is not read out completely (a considerable time disadvantage, which renders this approach unusable for point scanners), but where each individual pixel is read out separately, although it can optionally also be binned (combined).
By targetedly selecting active and inactive pixels, it is, for example, even possible to simulate an extremely variable pinhole.
Hereinafter, the terms pinhole and pinhole aperture will be used interchangeably and are defined, in particular, as pinhole apertures, the diameters of which can be adjusted.
To this end, the receiver is placed into the pinhole plane in the detection beam. If a larger pinhole is needed, simply more pixels are binned. It is also no longer necessary to adjust a pinhole because now all that is necessary is to use additional pixels.
Similarly, it is possible to improve the imaging of aberrations from the optimum since the detection spot will not necessarily always be round.
Even more complex imaging errors can be detected and parts of the image that would normally have been cut off by the pinhole can be visualized by separately detecting and analyzing these areas.
Because these areas can be viewed separately, it is possible, given that the apparatus function is known, to subtract the optical errors out of the system and to increase the resolution of the system.
In addition, by varying the spot shapes, it may be possible to determine the focus, for example, whether above or below the focal plane.
The detector elements used can be diodes, APDs, PMTs or any other suitable element, provided that each sensor can be read out individually, thus ensuring readout times shorter than 1 μsec, such as are needed in an LSM.
The invention can be applied both in laser scanning microscopes having a plurality of pinholes in separate detection channels that have been split by dichroic beam splitters and, to especially great advantage, in cases of simultaneous illumination with a plurality of point light sources, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,028,306, with several receiver arrays according to the present invention being placed in the areas in the detector in which pinhole apertures had previously been located.
These receiver arrays can subsequently be individually adjusted to the distributions of incident light; however, for example, after an individual adjustment, it is also possible to synchronously change the direction of these arrays, e.g., for “oversampling,” as described below.
The invention will be described in greater detail below in connection with annexed drawings, in which:
The drawings in
In
The location of spot S on the matrix can be determined, for example, by alternately enabling and disabling individual elements E prior to the actual measurement (the scanning procedure).
This obviates the laborious correction described above that is necessary in the prior art, yet makes accurate measurements possible.
As illustrated in
In contrast to the prior art, the use of the active receiver elements makes it possible for the pinhole to assume nearly any shape, while the pinhole apertures up to now had generally been limited to round, square, or rhombic shapes.
By deactivating the remaining elements E of the receiver matrix, the stray light and any other undesirable light that does not originate from the focal point in the specimen is suppressed.
The size of the pinhole can also be changed by targetedly increasing or decreasing the number of activated elements immediately prior to repeating a scanning procedure in order to generate a scanned image. This approach is used, for example, in so-called “oversampling” with a reduction of the pinhole size, and can here be implemented especially easily.
Obviously, instead of “oversampling,” undersampling with an increased pinhole diameter is possible as well.
The special advantage of this invention is its variability, without having to use mechanical elements for adjustments.
While thus far the pinhole had to be laboriously shifted (as mentioned above), it is now possible, as illustrated in
This situation can arise relatively frequently, for example, when changes to the microscope optical system have to be made, such as when switching between lenses or objective lenses, which can now be easily controlled and automated.
In addition to the active receiver distribution EA,
This can occur if a Z-adjustment of the specimen is made at a constant focus.
Based on the change in shape and size, information as to the height can be obtained.
For example, if the elements EA1 and spot S are exposed to light, this can trigger, for example, a control signal indicating that the height needs to be corrected (refocusing).
For example, I1 can represent the counters of the individual photons that are detected, after receipt of a photon, by the respective APD before it is reset by the internal erase circuit that individually reads out (counts) the signals (photons) of the individual APDs and relays them to a router in I2; in I2, the individually counted light pulses are adjustably linked and are routed, for example, in I3, via a GPU (graphic processing unit) in the direction of an analyzing unit (computer) AE so as to relieve the central computer and to assemble the image by synchronization with the scanning procedure.
In
Because of the relative sizes of the diameters of the APD and the PMT (APD approximately 150 μm, PMT 20 mm), the person skilled in the art, while focusing the system, will obviously have to change the optical conditions (beam expansion) if, instead of APDs, PMT matrices are used.
While the invention has been illustrated and described in connection with currently preferred embodiments shown and described in detail, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown since various modifications and structural changes may be made without departing in any way from the spirit of the present invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and practical application to thereby enable a person skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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DE102010055882.6 | Dec 2010 | DE | national |