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Journal ArticleDOI

Compensation of the inherent wave front curvature in digital holographic coherent microscopy for quantitative phase-contrast imaging

10 Apr 2003-Applied Optics (Optical Society of America)-Vol. 42, Iss: 11, pp 1938-1946
TL;DR: An approach is proposed for removing the wavefront curvature introduced by the microscope imaging objective in digital holography, which otherwise hinders the phase contrast imaging at reconstruction planes and it is shown that a correction effect can be obtained at all reconstruction planes.
Abstract: An approach is proposed for removing the wave front curvature introduced by the microscope imaging objective in digital holography, which otherwise hinders the phase contrast imaging at reconstruction planes. The unwanted curvature is compensated by evaluating a correcting wave front at the hologram plane with no need for knowledge of the optical parameters, focal length of the imaging lens, or distances in the setup. Most importantly it is shown that a correction effect can be obtained at all reconstruction planes. Three different methods have been applied to evaluate the correction wave front and the methods are discussed in detail. The proposed approach is demonstrated by applying digital holography as a method of coherent microscopy for imaging amplitude and phase contrast of microstructures.
Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
15 Jun 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, a self compensating interferometer was employed with a polarizing beam splitter where two counter propagating orthogonally polarized mutually coherent beams were modulated by the phase shifts introduced by a phase sample.
Abstract: The aim of this study is to model edge enhancement effect in purely phase samples. A self compensating interferometer similar to Sagnac’s, employed with a polarizing beam splitter where two counter propagating orthogonally polarized mutually coherent beams are modulated by the phase shifts introduced by a phase sample. An afocal imaging system is used to image the phase sample on the CCD so that one of the images is slightly defocused. Real-time subtraction of two images results in intensity modulation of phase interfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Neural Architecture Search generated Phase Retrieval Net (NAS-PRNet), which is an encoder-decoder style neural network, automatically found from a large neural network architecture search space, outperforming the widely used U-Net and original SparseMask-generated neural network.
Abstract: : Single neural networks have achieved simultaneous phase retrieval with aberration compensation and phase unwrapping in off-axis Quantitative Phase Imaging (QPI). However, when designing the phase retrieval neural network architecture, the trade-off between computation latency and accuracy has been largely neglected. Here, we propose Neural Architecture Search (NAS) generated Phase Retrieval Net (NAS-PRNet), which is an encoder-decoder style neural network, automatically found from a large neural network architecture search space. The NAS scheme in NAS-PRNet is modified from SparseMask, in which the learning of skip connections between the encoder and the decoder is formulated as a differentiable NAS problem, and the gradient decent is applied to efficiently search the optimal skip connections. Using MobileNet-v2 as the encoder and a synthesized loss that incorporates phase reconstruction and network sparsity losses, NAS-PRNet has realized fast and accurate phase retrieval of biological cells. When tested on a cell dataset, NAS-PRNet has achieved a Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) of 36.1 dB, outperforming the widely used U-Net and original SparseMask-generated neural network. Notably, the computation latency of NAS-PRNet is only 31 ms which is 12 times less than U-Net. Moreover, the connectivity scheme in NAS-PRNet, identified from one off-axis QPI system, can be well fitted to another with different fringe patterns.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Dec 2009
TL;DR: An effective method to eliminate the linear term of the shearogram automatically have been proposed and demonstrated and show that both the automatic phase compensation approach and the lateral shearing interference combining DH approach are effective for phase measurement of microstructure object.
Abstract: Digital microscopic holographic recording and numerical reconstruction and the lateral resolution of holographic system were analyzed. Based on off-axis lensless Fourier transform digital holography the two popular phase reconstruction methods proposed by T. Colomb and by S. De Nicola were discussed and simulated. The results show that both the automatic phase compensation approach and the lateral shearing interference combining DH approach are effective for phase measurement of microstructure object. Moreover, an effective method to eliminate the linear term of the shearogram automatically have been proposed and demonstrated. The simulating results demonstrate the validity of the proposed method. It also indicates that to obtain correct phase image the phase difference between the two adjacent pixels of the shearogram map must be less than 2 . π Keywordsdigital holography; microscopy; phase compensation

Cites methods from "Compensation of the inherent wave f..."

  • ...Recently, several methods have been proposed to perform quantitative phase imaging [3, 4, 10-13]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , an unsupervised methodology to estimate the aberrations of an optical microscopy system from a single hologram is described. But the method is based on the Inverse Problems Approach reconstructions of holograms of spherical objects.
Abstract: In the context of digital in-line holographic microscopy, we describe an unsupervised methodology to estimate the aberrations of an optical microscopy system from a single hologram. The method is based on the Inverse Problems Approach reconstructions of holograms of spherical objects. The forward model is based on a Lorenz-Mie model distorted by optical aberrations described by Zernike polynomials. This methodology is thus able to characterize most varying aberrations in the field of view in order to take them into account to improve the reconstruction of any sample. We show that this approach increases the repeatability and quantitativity of the reconstructions in both simulations and experimental data. We use the Cramér-Rao lower bounds to study the accuracy of the reconstructions. Finally, we demonstrate the efficiency of this aberration calibration with image reconstructions using a phase retrieval algorithm as well as a regularized inverse problems algorithm.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new method is proposed in which the distribution of complex amplitude at a plane is measured by phase-shifting interferometry and then Fresnel transformed by a digital computer, which can reconstruct an arbitrary cross section of a three-dimensional object with higher image quality and a wider viewing angle than from conventional digital holography using an off-axis configuration.
Abstract: A new method for three-dimensional image formation is proposed in which the distribution of complex amplitude at a plane is measured by phase-shifting interferometry and then Fresnel transformed by a digital computer. The method can reconstruct an arbitrary cross section of a three-dimensional object with higher image quality and a wider viewing angle than from conventional digital holography using an off-axis configuration. Basic principles and experimental verification are described.

1,813 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The principle of recording holograms directly on a CCD target is described and a real image of the object is reconstructed from the digitally sampled hologram by means of numerical methods.
Abstract: The principle of recording holograms directly on a CCD target is described. A real image of the object is reconstructed from the digitally sampled hologram by means of numerical methods.

1,444 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new application of digital holography for phase-contrast imaging and optical metrology and an application to surface profilometry shows excellent agreement with contact-stylus probe measurements.
Abstract: We present a new application of digital holography for phase-contrast imaging and optical metrology. This holographic imaging technique uses a CCD camera for recording of a digital Fresnel off-axis hologram and a numerical method for hologram reconstruction. The method simultaneously provides an amplitude-contrast image and a quantitative phase-contrast image. An application to surface profilometry is presented and shows excellent agreement with contact-stylus probe measurements.

1,202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Off-axis holograms recorded with a magnified image of microscopic objects are numerically reconstructed in amplitude and phase by calculation of scalar diffraction in the Fresnel approximation to show that the transverse resolution is equal to the diffraction limit of the imaging system.
Abstract: We present a digital method for holographic microscopy involving a CCD camera as a recording device. Off-axis holograms recorded with a magnified image of microscopic objects are numerically reconstructed in amplitude and phase by calculation of scalar diffraction in the Fresnel approximation. For phase-contrast imaging the reconstruction method involves the computation of a digital replica of the reference wave. A digital method for the correction of the phase aberrations is presented. We present a detailed description of the reconstruction procedure and show that the transverse resolution is equal to the diffraction limit of the imaging system.

1,174 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The principles and major applications of digital recording and numerical reconstruction of holograms (digital holography) are described, which are applied to measure shape and surface deformation of opaque bodies and refractive index fields within transparent media.
Abstract: This article describes the principles and major applications of digital recording and numerical reconstruction of holograms (digital holography). Digital holography became feasible since charged coupled devices (CCDs) with suitable numbers and sizes of pixels and computers with sufficient speed became available. The Fresnel or Fourier holograms are recorded directly by the CCD and stored digitally. No film material involving wet-chemical or other processing is necessary. The reconstruction of the wavefield, which is done optically by illumination of a hologram, is performed by numerical methods. The numerical reconstruction process is based on the Fresnel–Kirchhoff integral, which describes the diffraction of the reconstructing wave at the micro-structure of the hologram. In the numerical reconstruction process not only the intensity, but also the phase distribution of the stored wavefield can be computed from the digital hologram. This offers new possibilities for a variety of applications. Digital holography is applied to measure shape and surface deformation of opaque bodies and refractive index fields within transparent media. Further applications are imaging and microscopy, where it is advantageous to refocus the area under investigation by numerical methods.

1,171 citations