Claims
- 1. A scanning microscope comprising:
optical transmission means for transmitting a light beam to an exit end of said optical transmission means proximate light focusing means, the light focusing means focusing the light emerging from the exit end to illuminate a point observation field on or within an object to be examined; and a scanner mounted in an optical head casing with said light focusing means, to cause the illuminated point observation field to scan over a two-dimensional cross-section of the object such that an image of the object emanated light over the cross section is constructible; wherein said scanner comprises a forwardly extending vibratable member and a counterbalance coupled thereto, said point observational field is forward of said vibratable member, said vibratable member is coupled to said exit end of said optical transmission means to provide said fast scan, said counterbalance balances reactive forces associated with vibration of said vibratable member and said exit end of said optical transmission means during operation, and said light focusing means is mounted in said optical head casing separately from said vibratable member whereby said light emanating from said exit end of said optical transmission means is, during operation, scanned across said light focussing means.
- 2. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said scanner is operable to scan the point observational field in a raster fashion, the scanner having a fast scanner to scan over rows and a slow scanner operating in a transverse direction to the fast scanner to displace consecutive rows.
- 3. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, including an optical element located to be vibrated by said vibratable member with said exit end of said optical transmission means to receive light from said exit end and thereby modify the numerical aperture of said optical transmission means.
- 4. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 3, wherein said optical element is a lens coupled to said vibratable member.
- 5. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 4, wherein said lens comprises an air inclusion and meniscus.
- 6. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said exit end of said optical transmission means is shaped to provide an optical element to modify the numerical aperture of said optical transmission means.
- 7. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 6, wherein said an optical element is formed by etching said exit end.
- 8. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 6, wherein said optical element is either convex to decrease said numerical aperture or concave to increase said numerical aperture.
- 9. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said exit end of said optical transmission means is formed with an oblique face to reduce reflection of light passing through said face.
- 10. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said point observational field is in the plane of vibration of said vibratable member.
- 11. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said scanner and said counterbalance form a resonant system having a Q value sufficiently high to enable low energy input requirements, owing to high input energy absorbance into resonant oscillation.
- 12. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 11, wherein said Q value is sufficiently low such that said oscillation has a broad resonance band so that perturbations introduced by physical shock are less likely to perturb said oscillation out off said resonance band and are therefore less likely to persist.
- 13. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 2, wherein said microscope includes a fork with first and second tines, the tines being operable to vibrate by driving means in mutually opposite phases, the vibration of the first and second tines providing said fast scanner and said counterbalance.
- 14. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein said exit end of the optical transmission means is fixed to said first tine so as to follow the vibration of said first tine to provide said fast scanner.
- 15. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein said microscope includes a mirror or mirrors fixed either to said tines or to one of said tines in the optical path of the light beam to provide said fast scanner.
- 16. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein said fork is mounted to the optical head casing with a flexible compliant material to further reduce transfer of vibration to the optical head case.
- 17. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said optical transmission means comprises an optical fiber, and the exit end of the optical transmission means forms the exit end of the core of the optical fiber.
- 18. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 17, wherein said fiber has a core/cladding composition chosen to have an effective numerical aperture as high as possible.
- 19. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 18, wherein said effective numerical aperture is greater than the nominal numerical aperture of 0.12 of current standard fibers.
- 20. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein said slow scanner is provided by movement of said fork in a direction perpendicular to the fast scan vibration.
- 21. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 20, wherein said movement is rotation of said fork about an axis.
- 22. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said microscope is a confocal microscope.
- 23. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 22, wherein said optical transmission means comprises an optical fiber.
- 24. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 22, arranged so that said object emanated light returning from the illuminated point observational field returns through said focusing means and enters said exit end.
- 25. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said optical transmission means includes near confocal transmission means having a light collection end adjacent to said exit end of said confocal transmission means to selectably collect light emanating from regions close to the point observational field.
- 26. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 25, wherein said optical fiber is single moded and said near confocal transmission means is provided by the cladding of said single mode optical fiber.
- 27. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 1, wherein said microscope is non-confocal.
- 28. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 27, wherein said microscope is arranged so that at least a portion of said object emanated light emanating from the point observational field is collected and returned via means other than the exit end of the optical transmission means.
- 29. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 28, wherein said microscope is adapted to two-photon microscopy.
- 30. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 2, wherein movement of said slow scanner is damped to reduce coupling of vibration from the fast scanner or from mechanical perturbations to the head.
- 31. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 2, wherein said slow scanner is operable to function by contraction and elongation of a wire whose dimensions are controlled by temperature variation caused by a varying electrical control current through the wire.
- 32. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 2, wherein said slow scanner is operable to function by a hydraulic actuator mechanism connected by a fluid conducting tube to a hydraulic driver pump remotely located which pumps fluid into and out of the hydraulic actuator in the optical head case.
- 33. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein said driving means of the fast scanner includes a first electromagnet proximate said first tine and a second electromagnet proximate said second tine, the first and second electromagnets being driven by alternating currents of opposite phase.
- 34. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 13, wherein energy to maintain the driving means is delivered to the scanner head by means of current-carrying wires or by pulses of electromagnetic radiation conveyed by an optic wave guide.
- 35. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 17, wherein inertia of said first tine is reduced by etching a region of the fiber proximate said exit end.
- 36. A scanning microscope as claimed in claim 17, wherein inertia of said first tine is reduced by hydrofluoric acid etching of a region of said fiber proximate said exit end.
- 37. A method of performing scanning microscopy comprising:
transmitting a light beam along optical transmission means to an exit end of said optical transmission means; focusing the light emerging from the exit end by means of light focusing means to illuminate a point observation field on or within an object to be examined; and scanning said point observational field by means of a scanner mounted in an optical head casing with said light focusing means, to cause the illuminated point observation field to scan over a two-dimensional cross-section of the object such that an image of the object emanated light over the cross section is constructible; wherein said scanner comprises a forwardly extending vibratable member and a counterbalance coupled thereto, said point observational field is forward of said vibratable member, said vibratable member is coupled to said exit end of said optical transmission means to provide said fast scan, said counterbalance balances reactive forces associated with vibration of said vibratable member and said exit end of said optical transmission means during operation, and said light focusing means is mounted in said optical head casing separately from said vibratable member whereby said light emanating from said exit end of said optical transmission means is, during operation, scanned across said light focussing means.
Priority Claims (1)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
| PO 7901 |
Jul 1997 |
AU |
|
CROSS REFERENCE OF RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/462,807 filed on Mar. 27, 2000, now abandoned.
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
09462807 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
| Child |
10265165 |
Oct 2002 |
US |