Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a rotary device for an optic tomography and an optic tomography with a rotating device.
(2) Description of Related Art
In optic tomography, for example when fluorescent radiation of an object fixed in a gel rod is detected in various directions, a rotating device is necessary in order to find the object to be observed microscopically (e.g., an embryo in a gel rod) and to rotate it around an axis extending through the object with a precision of approx. 0.2 μm.
Therefore, the object of the present invention is to provide a rotating device for an optic tomography, by which the object can be rotated around a predetermined axis of the object with a predetermined precision. Further, an optic tomography shall be provided having such a rotating device.
The object of the invention is attained in a rotating device for optical tomography, with a sample carrier with an object to be examined being rotated around a predetermined axis of an object, with the rotating device being provided with a rotary module, which may cause a rotation around a first rotary axis, a first positioning module, which is connected to the rotary module and which may be positioned with the rotary module along the first rotary axis, and a second positioning module, which is connected to the rotary module and which can be mounted to the sample carrier with the object to be examined, allowing the axis of the object to be positioned in reference to the first rotary axis via the second positioning module such that the object is rotated around the axis of the object when the rotary module is rotated.
With this rotary device, using a relatively simple design, the necessary precision can be accomplished for rotation around the predetermined axis of the object. In particular, the rotary module can be provided with a first rotary table, which can be rotated around the first rotary axis, and the axis of the object can be positioned via the second positioning module such that it coincides with the first rotary axis. Further, the second positioning module may be provided with a x-y-table, which is connected to the rotary module in a torque-proof manner.
It is also possible for the second positioning module to be provided with a second and a third rotary table, with the second rotary table being mounted so that it rotates relative to the first rotary table, the third rotary table, rotational around a third rotary axis, being mounted to the second rotary table in a torque-proof fashion and neither the first and second rotary axis nor the second and third rotary axis coincide.
Further, the second positioning module may be provided with a second table, which is connected to the first rotary table via a linear displacement device, with the object carrier being rotational in reference to the first rotary table. The ability to rotate the object carrier, for example the second table, may be embodied rotational in reference to the first rotary table.
Further, the rotary module may be provided with a x-y-table, which is controlled such, that the second positioning module is rotated around the first rotary axis, and in which the second positioning module is provided with a rotary table, which is connected to the x-y-table of the rotary module in a torque-proof manner.
The object is further attained by an optic tomography having an above-described rotary device, a lighting module for illuminating the object, a detection module for detecting at least one optic cross-section of the object, and a control module for controlling the tomography. The detection module can for example detect fluorescent radiation of the object. Of course, each other radiation emitted by the object due to lighting may also be detected. In particular, the detection module may detect confocally the radiation of the object.
The optic tomography can in particular be embodied as a microscope or as a laser scanning microscope.
In the following the invention is described in greater detail in an exemplary fashion using the attached drawings.
In describing preferred embodiments of the present invention illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose.
In
At the rotary device 1 a sample carrier 4 (here a gel rod) with an object 5 to be examined is fastened. For better visibility, the rotary device 1 is shown in an exploded representation in reference to the gel rod 4. Actually, the gel rod 4 is held by the rotary device 1. The object may, for example, represent an embryo 5 embedded in the gel rod 4.
The object 5 is lit via the lighting module 2 along a lighting axis BA, with the lighting module 2 emitting a linearly focused bundle of light beams (as indicated by the arrow P1) so that in the gel rod 4 and thus also in the embedded embryo 5 an area is lit positioned parallel to the y-z-level. The fluorescent radiation FS created this way in the embryo is detected via the detection module 3 so that an optic cross-section through the embryo 5 is detected (the detection axis is called DA). In particular, the detection can be performed confocally in order to yield a very good resolution in the x-direction.
The rotary device 1 is embodied such that it positions the gel rod 4 (in the z-direction) and rotates it (around an axis parallel in reference to the z-axis by at least the rotary angle α equaling ±45°) such that the gel rod 4 is rotational around an object axis 6 (parallel in reference to the z-axis) which passes through the object 5, independent from the position of the object 5 in the gel rod 4. Here, the axis 6 of the object is off-set parallel in reference to the central axis TO of the gel rod 4. This way, via the optic tomography, optic cross-sections can be detected in various rotational positions of the object 5, from which, then in a known fashion, the desired three-dimensional image of the object can be generated. The positioning, rotation of the object 5, lighting, detection and, if necessary, evaluation of the measuring data, and the image creation occur under the control of the control module S.
The detection module 3 can detect the object in an enlarged fashion so that the optic tomography may also be used as a microscope. The lighting module 2 and the detection module 3 may be embodied such that together with the rotary table, the control module S, and if necessary other modules known to those skilled in the art are assembled to form a laser-scanning microscope, by which in a known fashion optic cross-sections through an object 5 can be detected in various depths in the object. By the rotary device 1 these optic cross-sections can be performed in various depths in the object, depending on the various rotary positions, so that a high-resolution three-dimensional image of the object 5 can be produced.
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment of the laser-scanning microscope, the bundle of illuminating radiation may not be embodied linearly, but for example also focused punctually into the object 5. Further, the lighting module 2 and the detection module 3 may be embodied such that the illumination and/or the detection occur confocally. In order to allow the realization of the desired rotation around the axis 6 of the object, with at least a rotation being desired of ±45°, the rotary device 1 may be embodied, for example, as shown in
The rotary device 1 comprises a first positioning module 7, with a first rotary table 8 being mounted to its bottom (
The x-y-table 15 is addressed such that both in the x-direction as well as the y-direction a sinus-shaped motion is performed. This results in the rotary table 16 moving circularly together with the respectively centrally arranged gel rod 4. The gel rod 4 is simultaneously rotated around its central axis TO by the rotary table 16, with an entire rotation of the gel rod being performed per period of the sinus motion in the x and the y direction. Therefore, an arbitrary rotary axis can be set within the gel rod 4, which extends parallel to its central axis TO, as the rotary axis of the combined motion of the x-y-table 15 and the rotary table 16 so that again the axis 5 of the object can be selected freely in the gel rod 4.
Modifications and variations of the above-described embodiments of the present invention are possible, as appreciated by those skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 039 935.8 | Aug 2006 | DE | national |