PSF with DIC

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mmodel mmodel
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PSF with DIC

 
While I'm here...has anyone properly investigated the effect of the DIC objective prism in confocal fluorescence imaging?  I had always assumed (rightly or wrongly) that it's presence didn't influence the PSF, but last week I was imaging some subresolution beads and found that, particularly on our IX81-based FV1000 confocals, the DIC objective prism had quite a pronounced effect on the psf.  Specifically the psf was distorted along a diagonal axis and at the point of focus, the bead appeared significantly larger with the prism in place. The implication of this is that for confocal fluorescence imaging, the resolution of the microscope is reduced when the DIC objective prism is in place.  I've also looked on our Zeiss Axiovert 200 and Nikon TE-2000 based systems which employ a slightly different method of DIC and there the effect is much less pronounced although noticeable.
 
Simon
 
Simon - thanks for your input on the noise issue - and as for the DIC prism, I haven't looked at the PSF but have noticed slight deterioration in resolution of fluorescent details, and try to remember to take it out when not needed. (Besides, the handle gets on the way of our Prior stage and has been broken several times).
 
Mike
 
Zucker.Robert Zucker.Robert
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Re: PSF with DIC

Mike
   We have seen this effect on Leica, Nikon, and Zeiss confocal
      microscopes. There is an incompatibly between the optics of a
      confocal microscope and the optics to generate DIC images
      (described below).  A short description of the observation  has
      been published in a review article on Evaluation of Confocal
      Performance(1). For optimum resolution it is essential to remove
      the interference DIC filters from the light path.  I have included
      the description below from the review article. There is also an
      image of PSF beads and 0.5 beads in the article.
   Please contact me for additional information.
   Best wishes
   Bob

   1. Zucker, R.M. Evaluation of Confocal Microscopy System Performance.
      Cell Imaging Techniques. Douglas Taajets editor Humana Press
      Chapter 5 77-135 2005

4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal
Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and it
can be
combined with fluorescence. However, because the microscope system was
designed for light to traverse through two interference filters, when
this optical
system is applied to a confocal microscope there is distortion in the
fluorescence
signals. The fluorescent light traverses the interference contrast
filter and
excites the sample, and then the emitted fluorescence travels back down
through the same interference contrast filter and back through the scan
head.
The resulting image shows a duplication of very small particles (0.17 μ
m, PSF
beads) and a distortion of larger particles. PSF beads show two spots
and 0.5 μm
beads show an egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same
distortion
that is observed on beads will occur on biological structures in cells (
see Fig.
15). For optimum resolution of data that will be deconvoluted later, it
is recommended
to remove the interference filters when acquiring an image.

Robert M. Zucker, PhD
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory.
Toxicology Assessment Division
Telephone: 919-541-1585   Fax: 919-541-4017
e-mail: [hidden email]

Mail address: USEPA,ORD,NHEERL,TAD
Developmental Biology Branch ( MD 67)
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, 27711

Shipping address:
2525 E.NC Highway 54
Durham, NC, 27713



                                                                                                                       
  From:       "MODEL, MICHAEL" <[hidden email]>                                                                      
                                                                                                                       
  To:         [hidden email]                                                                        
                                                                                                                       
  Date:       10/07/2009 09:43 AM                                                                                      
                                                                                                                       
  Subject:    PSF with DIC                                                                                            
                                                                                                                       
  Sent by:    Confocal Microscopy List <[hidden email]>                                              
                                                                                                                       






While I'm here...has anyone properly investigated the effect of the DIC
objective prism in confocal fluorescence imaging?  I had always assumed
(rightly or wrongly) that it's presence didn't influence the PSF, but
last week I was imaging some subresolution beads and found that,
particularly on our IX81-based FV1000 confocals, the DIC objective prism
had quite a pronounced effect on the psf.  Specifically the psf was
distorted along a diagonal axis and at the point of focus, the bead
appeared significantly larger with the prism in place. The implication
of this is that for confocal fluorescence imaging, the resolution of the
microscope is reduced when the DIC objective prism is in place.  I've
also looked on our Zeiss Axiovert 200 and Nikon TE-2000 based systems
which employ a slightly different method of DIC and there the effect is
much less pronounced although noticeable.

Simon

Simon - thanks for your input on the noise issue - and as for the DIC
prism, I haven't looked at the PSF but have noticed slight deterioration
in resolution of fluorescent details, and try to remember to take it out
when not needed. (Besides, the handle gets on the way of our Prior stage
and has been broken several times).

Mike

Bruno Afonso Bruno Afonso
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Re: PSF with DIC

In reply to this post by mmodel
hey,

We had to remove our prism in our 100x DIC objective (in a nikon te2000) when doing sub-difraction fluorescence microscopy. We were getting the same you saw with the beads. So, imaging beads will affect also widefield microscopy when using the prism.

b

--
Bruno Afonso
http://brunoafonso.com (personal, mostly portuguese)
http://openwetware.org/wiki/User:BrunoAfonso (Professional, english)


On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 09:42, MODEL, MICHAEL <[hidden email]> wrote:
 
While I'm here...has anyone properly investigated the effect of the DIC objective prism in confocal fluorescence imaging?  I had always assumed (rightly or wrongly) that it's presence didn't influence the PSF, but last week I was imaging some subresolution beads and found that, particularly on our IX81-based FV1000 confocals, the DIC objective prism had quite a pronounced effect on the psf.  Specifically the psf was distorted along a diagonal axis and at the point of focus, the bead appeared significantly larger with the prism in place. The implication of this is that for confocal fluorescence imaging, the resolution of the microscope is reduced when the DIC objective prism is in place.  I've also looked on our Zeiss Axiovert 200 and Nikon TE-2000 based systems which employ a slightly different method of DIC and there the effect is much less pronounced although noticeable.
 
Simon
 
Simon - thanks for your input on the noise issue - and as for the DIC prism, I haven't looked at the PSF but have noticed slight deterioration in resolution of fluorescent details, and try to remember to take it out when not needed. (Besides, the handle gets on the way of our Prior stage and has been broken several times).
 
Mike
 


Joachim Hehl Joachim Hehl
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Eyepiece and virtual image

Eyepiece and virtual image


Dear all,

I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: Joachim.Hehl@...

Guy Cox Guy Cox
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

Eyepiece and virtual image
You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube.  If you see a sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!
 
                                                                    Guy
 

Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
    http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
______________________________________________
Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
University of Sydney, NSW 2006
______________________________________________
Phone +61 2 9351 3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
Mobile 0413 281 861
______________________________________________
     http://www.guycox.net

 


From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Eyepiece and virtual image




Dear all,

I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: Joachim.Hehl@...

Joachim Hehl Joachim Hehl
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

Re: Eyepiece and virtual image Dear Guy,
The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
Joachim

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube.  If you see a sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!

                                                                   Guy



Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
    http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
______________________________________________
Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
University of Sydney, NSW 2006
______________________________________________
Phone +61 2 9351 3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
Mobile 0413 281 861
______________________________________________
     http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>  

 


From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
To: CONFOCALMICROSCOPY@...
Subject: Eyepiece and virtual image




Dear all,

I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: Joachim.Hehl@...


Guy Cox Guy Cox
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

Re: Eyepiece and virtual image
But is this image truly in focus?  If you adjust the microscope focus, does it get sharper?
 
                                                               Guy
 


From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

Dear Guy,
The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
Joachim

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube.  If you see a sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!

                                                                   Guy



Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
    http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
______________________________________________
Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
University of Sydney, NSW 2006
______________________________________________
Phone +61 2 9351 3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
Mobile 0413 281 861
______________________________________________
     http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>  

 


From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
To: CONFOCALMICROSCOPY@...
Subject: Eyepiece and virtual image




Dear all,

I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: Joachim.Hehl@...


gradice gradice
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Joachim Hehl
Might you be looking at the Ramsden disc? If so, that is sharp image of the field diaphragm and condenser diaphragm planes, not the specimen plane.   


The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
Gary Radice






Joachim Hehl Joachim Hehl
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Guy Cox
Re: Eyepiece and virtual image I would say it is in focus. But yes it gets a bit sharper when adjusting the focus. And the wider I go back with the paper the bigger the image is, like a projector.  Maybe you try it out with one of your scopes?

Joachim

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

But is this image truly in focus?  If you adjust the microscope focus, does it get sharper?

                                                              Guy



From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
To: CONFOCALMICROSCOPY@...
Subject: Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

Dear Guy,
The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
Joachim

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing so  that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the eyepiece - either  adjust the microscope focus a little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its  tube.  If you see a sharp image without refocussing from your normal  viewing position, it probably means that you - like me - are  long-sighted!

                                                                  Guy



Optical Imaging  Techniques in Cell Biology
by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor  & Francis
    http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
______________________________________________
Associate  Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen  Building F09,
University of Sydney, NSW  2006
______________________________________________
Phone +61 2 9351  3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
Mobile 0413 281  861
______________________________________________
     http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>   

 

 

From: Confocal  Microscopy List [[hidden email]]  On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl
Sent: Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36  PM
To: CONFOCALMICROSCOPY@...
Subject:  Eyepiece and virtual image




Dear all,

I  have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As  you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the  objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance  from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two  focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then   magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in  the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and  magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its  optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so  good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT:  When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or  smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use  when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image  of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual  image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim  Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich  Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich,  Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41  44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:        +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: Joachim.Hehl@...



Joachim Hehl Joachim Hehl
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by gradice
Re: Eyepiece and virtual image No, it is the image plane. I can see the object


On [DATE], "gradice" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

Might you be looking at the Ramsden disc? If so, that is sharp image of the field diaphragm and condenser diaphragm planes, not the specimen plane.   


The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also  happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.

Gary Radice





 


gradice gradice
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Joachim Hehl
Oops, typed too fast. The Ramsden disc is conjugate with the condenser  
diaphragm and back focal plane of the objective, not the field  
diaphragm.


Gary Radice
Ian Dobbie Ian Dobbie
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Re: PSF with DIC

In reply to this post by Zucker.Robert
[hidden email] writes:

> 4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal

> Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and
> it can be combined with fluorescence. However, because the
> microscope system was designed for light to traverse through two
> interference filters, when this optical system is applied to a
> confocal microscope there is distortion in the fluorescence
> signals. The fluorescent light traverses the interference contrast
> filter and excites the sample, and then the emitted fluorescence
> travels back down through the same interference contrast filter and
> back through the scan head.  The resulting image shows a duplication
> of very small particles (0.17 μ m, PSF beads) and a distortion of
> larger particles. PSF beads show two spots and 0.5 μm beads show an
> egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same distortion that
> is observed on beads will occur on biological structures in cells (
> see Fig.  15). For optimum resolution of data that will be
> deconvoluted later, it is recommended to remove the interference
> filters when acquiring an image.

On my first reading of this I thought by interference contrast filter
Robert was referring to the polariser. On a second reading I realise
that it refers to the DIC prism. I wrote this extended reply before
realising that we are saying the same thing but I am posting this
anyway as a second description might help people understand what is
going on and why this happens.

DIC works by sheering the two polarizations relative to each
other with the condenser prism. The beams then pass through slightly
different sections of the sample, and are recombined with the second
(objective) prism. This produces an image of relative phase shift
between the two beams.

In epi-fluorescence the excitation beam passes through the DIC
(objective) prism and is split into two beams, offset relative to one
another. The fluorescence from these two regions is them shifted back
as the emission passes back through the (objective) DIC prism. This
produces a double image shifted by the sheer in the DIC prism. The
sheer tends to be a fraction of the resolution, say 1/3rd but varies
with lens, manufacture etc... In conventional wide field this is
generally not noticeable. On a properly set up confocal this leads to
a pronounced broadening of the PSF in the sheer direction, at 45
degrees to the x and y sample axis.

As Robert says, the take home message is it is best to remove any DIC
optics before taking confocal images.

Ian
Aryeh Weiss Aryeh Weiss
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Joachim Hehl
Try removing the ocular and repeating the test. I think that you will
see the same image on your paper, except it may be brighter. The very
small depth of focus of your objective translates into a very large
image depth. There ia table that shows this at:
http://www.microscopyu.com/articles/formulas/formulasfielddepth.html

It may be that on your paper, you are seeing an undeviated component of
the real image from the objective/tube lens combination, which passed
though the center of your ocular. If I am correct, then you will not see
a very sharp image if you use a low mag/low NA objective, and you will
see the best images with high mag/high NA objectives.

--aryeh

Joachim Hehl wrote:

> I would say it is in focus. But yes it gets a bit sharper when adjusting
> the focus. And the wider I go back with the paper the bigger the image
> is, like a projector.  Maybe you try it out with one of your scopes?
>
> Joachim
>
> On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:
>
>     But is this image truly in focus?  If you adjust the microscope
>     focus, does it get sharper?
>
>                                                                   Guy
>
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *From:* Confocal Microscopy List
>     [mailto:[hidden email]] *On Behalf Of *Joachim Hehl
>     *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
>     *To:* [hidden email]
>     *Subject:* Re: Eyepiece and virtual image
>
>     Dear Guy,
>     The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the eyepiece.
>     I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am
>     short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in
>     front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also
>      happens  to my normal-sighted colleagues.
>     Joachim
>
>     On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:
>
>         You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by refocussing
>         so  that the first image is in front of the focal plane of the
>         eyepiece - either  adjust the microscope focus a little or lift
>         the eyepiece slightly in its  tube.  If you see a sharp image
>         without refocussing from your normal  viewing position, it
>         probably means that you - like me - are  long-sighted!
>
>                                                                           Guy
>
>
>
>         Optical Imaging  Techniques in Cell Biology
>         by Guy Cox    CRC Press / Taylor  & Francis
>             http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
>         ______________________________________________
>         Associate  Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
>         Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen  Building F09,
>         University of Sydney, NSW  2006
>         ______________________________________________
>         Phone +61 2 9351  3176     Fax +61 2 9351 7682
>         Mobile 0413 281  861
>         ______________________________________________
>              http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>  
>
>          
>
>          
>         ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>         *From:* Confocal  Microscopy List
>         [mailto:[hidden email]]  *On Behalf Of
>         *Joachim Hehl
>         *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36  PM
>         *To:* [hidden email]
>         *Subject:*  Eyepiece and virtual image
>
>
>
>
>         Dear all,
>
>         I  have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic”
>         question:
>
>         As  you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and
>         geometric optics the  objective produces a real, inverted and
>         magnified image since the distance  from the object to the
>         object front lens is bigger than one but less than two  focal
>         lengths of that given objective.
>         This intermediate image is then   magnified by the eyepiece.
>         Since the intermediate image lies exactly in  the front focal
>         plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and
>          magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye
>         with its  optical components is then producing a real image on
>         the retina.
>         So far, so  good.
>         By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen.
>         BUT:  When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a
>         distance bigger or  smaller than the  back focal plane of the
>         eyepiece (the distance I use  when I look through it with my
>         eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image  of my object on
>         the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual  image?
>         Thanks for your input!
>
>         Joachim
>
>
>         Joachim  Hehl
>         LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich  Hönggerberg
>         Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
>         CH-8093, Zurich,  Switzerland
>
>         Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
>         Phone:     +41  44 633 6202
>         Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
>         Fax:        +41 44 632 1298
>         e-mail: [hidden email]
>
>
>


--
Aryeh Weiss
School of Engineering
Bar Ilan University
Ramat Gan 52900 Israel

Ph:  972-3-5317638
FAX: 972-3-7384050
Julian Smith III Julian Smith III
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Joachim Hehl
Yes--what you describe is quite true--but the point is that you do have
to refocus the microscope to make the projected image sharp. In fact,
there are old methods for using that to take photos with plate-film
cameras, where the image was refocused on the camera's ground-glass screen.

But I think the answer to your original question is that the
intermediate image is not quite at the front focal point of the
eyepiece, so the eyepiece isn't really projecting an image to infinity.
In fact, when you look in the eyepiece, the apparent (virtual) image
distance is roughly 25cm away. My understanding is that this is
(historically speaking) so that you could look in your upright monocular
microscope with your left eye and at your drawing paper on the table
next to the microscope with your right eye.

That said, I think the physical distance between the actual front focal
plane (image at infinity) and the intermediate image (image at 25 cm) is
probably pretty small. I'm not able to walk through the math to get
there....

Julian


Joachim Hehl wrote:

> I would say it is in focus. But yes it gets a bit sharper when
> adjusting the focus. And the wider I go back with the paper the bigger
> the image is, like a projector. Maybe you try it out with one of your
> scopes?
>
> Joachim
>
> On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:
>
>     But is this image truly in focus? If you adjust the microscope
>     focus, does it get sharper?
>
>     Guy
>
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *From:* Confocal Microscopy List
>     [mailto:[hidden email]] *On Behalf Of *Joachim Hehl
>     *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
>     *To:* [hidden email]
>     *Subject:* Re: Eyepiece and virtual image
>
>     Dear Guy,
>     The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the
>     eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am
>     short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in
>     front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also
>     happens to my normal-sighted colleagues.
>     Joachim
>
>     On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:
>
>         You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by
>         refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal
>         plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a
>         little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube. If you see a
>         sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing
>         position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!
>
>         Guy
>
>
>
>         Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
>         by Guy Cox CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
>         http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
>         ______________________________________________
>         Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
>         Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
>         University of Sydney, NSW 2006
>         ______________________________________________
>         Phone +61 2 9351 3176 Fax +61 2 9351 7682
>         Mobile 0413 281 861
>         ______________________________________________
>         http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>
>
>
>
>
>         ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>         *From:* Confocal Microscopy List
>         [mailto:[hidden email]] *On Behalf Of
>         *Joachim Hehl
>         *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
>         *To:* [hidden email]
>         *Subject:* Eyepiece and virtual image
>
>
>
>
>         Dear all,
>
>         I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic”
>         question:
>
>         As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and
>         geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and
>         magnified image since the distance from the object to the
>         object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal
>         lengths of that given objective.
>         This intermediate image is then magnified by the eyepiece.
>         Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal
>         plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and
>         magnified image which occur in the infinite space. Our eye
>         with its optical components is then producing a real image on
>         the retina.
>         So far, so good.
>         By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a
>         screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the
>         eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the back focal
>         plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through
>         it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of
>         my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is
>         a virtual image?
>         Thanks for your input!
>
>         Joachim
>
>
>         Joachim Hehl
>         LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
>         Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
>         CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland
>
>         Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
>         Phone: +41 44 633 6202
>         Natel: +41 44 658 1679
>         Fax: +41 44 632 1298
>         e-mail: [hidden email]
>
>
>


--
Julian P.S. Smith III
Director, Winthrop Microscopy Facility
Dept. of Biology
Winthrop University
520 Cherry Rd.
Rock Hill, SC  29733

803-323-2111 x6427 (vox)
803-323-3448 (fax)
803-524-2347 (cell)
Carol Heckman Carol Heckman
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Joachim Hehl
Joachim-
According to my understanding, some oculars produce the virtual image and some do not.  If not, then you can see the image projected on a sheet of paper.
Carol
Center for Microscopy & Microanalysis
Bowling Green State University
________________________________________
From: Confocal Microscopy List [[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Joachim Hehl [[hidden email]]
Sent: Thursday, October 08, 2009 5:35 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Eyepiece and virtual image

Dear all,

I have a –maybe stupid- and not confocal but “basic optic” question:

As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and magnified image since the distance from the object to the object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal lengths of that given objective.
This intermediate image is then  magnified by the eyepiece. Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and magnified image which occur in the infinite space.  Our eye with its optical components is then producing a real image on the retina.
So far, so good.
By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the  back focal plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is a virtual image?
Thanks for your input!

Joachim


Joachim Hehl
LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
Phone:     +41 44 633 6202
Natel:     +41 44 658 1679
Fax:       +41 44 632 1298
e-mail: [hidden email]
James Pawley James Pawley
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Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

In reply to this post by Julian Smith III
Re: Eyepiece and virtual image
Hi all,

This topic causes lots of confusion at the UBC Live Cell Course.

We try to emphasize three things:

1. That any lens will create a real image of any object on its "front" side at some distance on its "back" side as long as the object is more than one focal length away from the optical center of the lens.

2. The magnification of this image will be directly proportional to the ratio of the distance between the central plane of the lens and the image divided by the distance between the object and the central plane. (i.e,  With any converging lens, you can get any magnification as long as you are flexible about where your object and your images planes are.)

3. Therefore, the three reasons for using different lenses for different magnifications are
        a. by having different focal lengths, these objectives can produce real images of specific sizes (magnifications) without having to change the object (specimen) and the image (CCD) planes.
        b. Low mag (i.e., long focal length) objectives can be located with their optical center farther from the object and be optimized to cover larger areas of the object while high magnification (i.e., shorter focal length) objectives can be mounted with their optical centers closer to the object and optimized to be free from aberrations at higher numerical aperture.
        c. Most important of all: the aberrations inherent in all simple, refractive lenses can only be compensated for at one particular set of object and image planes.

So yes, an infinity objective (plus its tube lens but either in the presence or the absence of an occular) will form real images of the structures found at any plane in the object that is more than one focal length beyond its optical center. The location of this image along the optical axis will determine what plane in the object will be in focus there.

BUT such an image will only be free from aberrations as long as it is focused on one plane in the object. For infinity-conjugate objectives, the ideal object plane is that found at the front focal plane of the objective and it will focus light from this plane into an (almost) perfect "intermediate" image on a plane 1 cm below the lip of the tube holding the ocular.

The ocular itself is located so that its optical center is one focal length above this intermediate image plane meaning that this image emerges from the ocular as though it were coming from an object an infinite distance away. This is important because, on a binocular viewing unit, the two ocular tubes are parallel to each other and so you would like the optical axes of your eyes to also be parallel, a condition that will only occur when your eyes think that they are focused on distant object. (The idea that this set up was designed to allow one superimpose the image from the microscope with that of an image being drawn by hand about one meter away is a useful approximation, but isn't quite true) .

Yes,  you can find real images of any plane in the object projected onto some plane above the "eye point" or "exit pupil" of the ocular, (or if you remove the ocular, at some plane down the tube) but any such image will only be free from aberrations if the image plane is at infinity (Which is why one uses a special projection lens rather than an ocular to project the image onto, for instance, a CCD camera).

I hope that this helps,

Cheers,

Jim Pawley

Yes--what you describe is quite true--but the point is that you do have to refocus the microscope to make the projected image sharp. In fact, there are old methods for using that to take photos with plate-film cameras, where the image was refocused on the camera's ground-glass screen.
But I think the answer to your original question is that the intermediate image is not quite at the front focal point of the eyepiece, so the eyepiece isn't really projecting an image to infinity. In fact, when you look in the eyepiece, the apparent (virtual) image distance is roughly 25cm away. My understanding is that this is (historically speaking) so that you could look in your upright monocular microscope with your left eye and at your drawing paper on the table next to the microscope with your right eye.

That said, I think the physical distance between the actual front focal plane (image at infinity) and the intermediate image (image at 25 cm) is probably pretty small. I'm not able to walk through the math to get there....

Julian


Joachim Hehl wrote:
I would say it is in focus. But yes it gets a bit sharper when adjusting the focus. And the wider I go back with the paper the bigger the image is, like a projector. Maybe you try it out with one of your scopes?

Joachim

On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

    But is this image truly in focus? If you adjust the microscope
    focus, does it get sharper?

    Guy


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    *From:* Confocal Microscopy List
    [mailto:[hidden email]] *On Behalf Of *Joachim Hehl
    *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 8:03 PM
    *To:* [hidden email]
    *Subject:* Re: Eyepiece and virtual image

    Dear Guy,
    The point is that I neither adjust the focus nor lift the
    eyepiece. I look through the eyepiece (without my glasses, I am
    short-sighted), focusing and then I only hold a piece of paper in
    front of the eyepiece and can see the picture on it. And this also
    happens to my normal-sighted colleagues.
    Joachim

    On [DATE], "Guy Cox" <[ADDRESS]> wrote:

        You can always get a real image from an eyepiece by
        refocussing so that the first image is in front of the focal
        plane of the eyepiece - either adjust the microscope focus a
        little or lift the eyepiece slightly in its tube. If you see a
        sharp image without refocussing from your normal viewing
        position, it probably means that you - like me - are long-sighted!

        Guy



        Optical Imaging Techniques in Cell Biology
        by Guy Cox CRC Press / Taylor & Francis
        http://www.guycox.com/optical.htm
        ______________________________________________
        Associate Professor Guy Cox, MA, DPhil(Oxon)
        Electron Microscope Unit, Madsen Building F09,
        University of Sydney, NSW 2006
        ______________________________________________
        Phone +61 2 9351 3176 Fax +61 2 9351 7682
        Mobile 0413 281 861
        ______________________________________________
        http://www.guycox.net <http://www.guycox.net/>




        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        *From:* Confocal Microscopy List
        [mailto:[hidden email]] *On Behalf Of
        *Joachim Hehl
        *Sent:* Thursday, 8 October 2009 7:36 PM
        *To:* [hidden email]
        *Subject:* Eyepiece and virtual image




        Dear all,

        I have a -maybe stupid- and not confocal but "basic optic"
        question:

        As you can read in all textbooks concerning microscopy and
        geometric optics the objective produces a real, inverted and
        magnified image since the distance from the object to the
        object front lens is bigger than one but less than two focal
        lengths of that given objective.
        This intermediate image is then magnified by the eyepiece.
        Since the intermediate image lies exactly in the front focal
        plane of the eyepiece the result is a virtual, true sided and
        magnified image which occur in the infinite space. Our eye
        with its optical components is then producing a real image on
        the retina.
        So far, so good.
        By definition, a virtual image can not be captured on a
        screen. BUT: When I hold a piece of paper in front of the
        eyepiece in a distance bigger or smaller than the back focal
        plane of the eyepiece (the distance I use when I look through
        it with my eyes) I am able to capture a pretty sharp image of
        my object on the paper. Why is this? I should not since it is
        a virtual image?
        Thanks for your input!

        Joachim


        Joachim Hehl
        LMC-Light Microscopy Centre, ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
        Schafmattstrasse 18, HPM F16.1
        CH-8093, Zurich, Switzerland

        Web: www.lmc.ethz.ch
        Phone: +41 44 633 6202
        Natel: +41 44 658 1679
        Fax: +41 44 632 1298
        e-mail: [hidden email]



--
Julian P.S. Smith III
Director, Winthrop Microscopy Facility
Dept. of Biology
Winthrop University
520 Cherry Rd.
Rock Hill, SC  29733

803-323-2111 x6427 (vox)
803-323-3448 (fax)
803-524-2347 (cell)


--
James and Christine Pawley, 21 N. Prospect Ave. Madison, WI, 53726   Phone: 608-238-3953
John Runions John Runions
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Re: PSF with DIC

In reply to this post by Ian Dobbie
Hi All,

After reading Ian and Robert's comments, I appreciate that there might be degradation of the PSF if DIC optics are in the confocal image forming pathway.  I am just a bit confused about which optical parts should be removed.  Different manufacturers have different names for equivalent bits.  I usually think of there being four components in the image forming pathway for DIC - two polarisers, and two DIC prisms.  These have various names depending on who you talk to, e.g. analyser, Wollaston prism etc.

My question is Zeiss specific.  In their microscopes, there is a piece of glass that I call the objective prism in the back focal plane of the objective.  Will it affect the PSF of confocal images.  It is a fiddly and expensive bit to remove and I worry about doing so if there is not going to be image degradation.

Thanks for your help, John.


Ian Dobbie wrote:
[hidden email] writes:

  
4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal
    

  
Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and
it can be combined with fluorescence. However, because the
microscope system was designed for light to traverse through two
interference filters, when this optical system is applied to a
confocal microscope there is distortion in the fluorescence
signals. The fluorescent light traverses the interference contrast
filter and excites the sample, and then the emitted fluorescence
travels back down through the same interference contrast filter and
back through the scan head.  The resulting image shows a duplication
of very small particles (0.17 μ m, PSF beads) and a distortion of
larger particles. PSF beads show two spots and 0.5 μm beads show an
egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same distortion that
is observed on beads will occur on biological structures in cells (
see Fig.  15). For optimum resolution of data that will be
deconvoluted later, it is recommended to remove the interference
filters when acquiring an image.
    

On my first reading of this I thought by interference contrast filter
Robert was referring to the polariser. On a second reading I realise
that it refers to the DIC prism. I wrote this extended reply before
realising that we are saying the same thing but I am posting this
anyway as a second description might help people understand what is
going on and why this happens. 

DIC works by sheering the two polarizations relative to each
other with the condenser prism. The beams then pass through slightly
different sections of the sample, and are recombined with the second
(objective) prism. This produces an image of relative phase shift
between the two beams.

In epi-fluorescence the excitation beam passes through the DIC
(objective) prism and is split into two beams, offset relative to one
another. The fluorescence from these two regions is them shifted back
as the emission passes back through the (objective) DIC prism. This
produces a double image shifted by the sheer in the DIC prism. The
sheer tends to be a fraction of the resolution, say 1/3rd but varies
with lens, manufacture etc... In conventional wide field this is
generally not noticeable. On a properly set up confocal this leads to
a pronounced broadening of the PSF in the sheer direction, at 45
degrees to the x and y sample axis.

As Robert says, the take home message is it is best to remove any DIC
optics before taking confocal images.

Ian
  

--
Runions signature

(Sent from my cra%#y non-Blackberry electronic device that still has wires)

 

*********************************
John Runions, Ph.D.
School of Life Sciences
Oxford Brookes University
Oxford, UK
OX3 0BP

email:  [hidden email]
phone: +44 (0) 1865 483 964

Runions’ lab web site

 

Visit The Illuminated Plant Cell dot com
Oxford Brookes Master's in Bioimaging with Molecular Technology

Higdon, Michael Higdon, Michael
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Re: PSF with DIC

In reply to this post by mmodel
Re: PSF with DIC

--------------------------
Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Device

This message was sent via Blackberry.

----- Original Message -----
From: John Runions <[hidden email]>
To: [hidden email] <[hidden email]>
Sent: Fri Oct 09 01:13:58 2009
Subject: Re: PSF with DIC

Hi All,

After reading Ian and Robert's comments, I appreciate that there might be degradation of the PSF if DIC optics are in the confocal image forming pathway.  I am just a bit confused about which optical parts should be removed.  Different manufacturers have different names for equivalent bits.  I usually think of there being four components in the image forming pathway for DIC - two polarisers, and two DIC prisms.  These have various names depending on who you talk to, e.g. analyser, Wollaston prism etc.

My question is Zeiss specific.  In their microscopes, there is a piece of glass that I call the objective prism in the back focal plane of the objective.  Will it affect the PSF of confocal images.  It is a fiddly and expensive bit to remove and I worry about doing so if there is not going to be image degradation.

Thanks for your help, John.


Ian Dobbie wrote:

        [hidden email] writes:
       
         

                4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal
                   

       
         

                Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and
                it can be combined with fluorescence. However, because the
                microscope system was designed for light to traverse through two
                interference filters, when this optical system is applied to a
                confocal microscope there is distortion in the fluorescence
                signals. The fluorescent light traverses the interference contrast
                filter and excites the sample, and then the emitted fluorescence
                travels back down through the same interference contrast filter and
                back through the scan head.  The resulting image shows a duplication
                of very small particles (0.17 μ m, PSF beads) and a distortion of
                larger particles. PSF beads show two spots and 0.5 μm beads show an
                egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same distortion that
                is observed on beads will occur on biological structures in cells (
                see Fig.  15). For optimum resolution of data that will be
                deconvoluted later, it is recommended to remove the interference
                filters when acquiring an image.
                   

       
        On my first reading of this I thought by interference contrast filter
        Robert was referring to the polariser. On a second reading I realise
        that it refers to the DIC prism. I wrote this extended reply before
        realising that we are saying the same thing but I am posting this
        anyway as a second description might help people understand what is
        going on and why this happens.
       
        DIC works by sheering the two polarizations relative to each
        other with the condenser prism. The beams then pass through slightly
        different sections of the sample, and are recombined with the second
        (objective) prism. This produces an image of relative phase shift
        between the two beams.
       
        In epi-fluorescence the excitation beam passes through the DIC
        (objective) prism and is split into two beams, offset relative to one
        another. The fluorescence from these two regions is them shifted back
        as the emission passes back through the (objective) DIC prism. This
        produces a double image shifted by the sheer in the DIC prism. The
        sheer tends to be a fraction of the resolution, say 1/3rd but varies
        with lens, manufacture etc... In conventional wide field this is
        generally not noticeable. On a properly set up confocal this leads to
        a pronounced broadening of the PSF in the sheer direction, at 45
        degrees to the x and y sample axis.
       
        As Robert says, the take home message is it is best to remove any DIC
        optics before taking confocal images.
       
        Ian
         


--


(Sent from my cra%#y non-Blackberry electronic device that still has wires)



*********************************
John Runions, Ph.D.
School of Life Sciences
Oxford Brookes University
Oxford, UK
OX3 0BP

email:  [hidden email]
phone: +44 (0) 1865 483 964

Runions’ lab web site <http://www.brookes.ac.uk/lifesci/runions/HTMLpages/index.html%21>



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Michael Weber-4 Michael Weber-4
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Re: PSF with DIC

In reply to this post by John Runions
When using DIC with a confocal setup, there is only one part which
interferes with the laser/emission: the objective Nomarski prism. The two
other parts (condenser Nomarski prism, analyzer) sit in the condenser
which is not part of the confocal beam path. A polarizer is not necessary,
since the laser is already polarized.

In Zeiss setups, you put the objective prism manually in a slit below the
objective. And yes, in my experience it does degrade image quality. This
is especially true if you are working at the resolution limit. For best
image quality, you have to remove the prism. That's actually one thing I
like at the Leica stands (i.e. DMI6000): the prism is motorized and can be
moved out automatically between two images, which means you can set up a
time-lapse with DIC and fluorescence images w/o the latter being worse
than necessary.

Michael


>            Hi All,
>
>  After reading Ian and Robert's comments, I appreciate that there might be
> degradation of the PSF if DIC optics are in the confocal image forming
> pathway.  I am just a bit confused about which optical parts should be
> removed.  Different manufacturers have different names for equivalent
> bits.  I usually think of there being four components in the image
> forming pathway for DIC - two polarisers, and two DIC prisms.  These
> have various names depending on who you talk to, e.g. analyser, Wollaston
> prism etc.
>
>  My question is Zeiss specific.  In their microscopes, there is a piece
> of glass that I call the objective prism in the back focal plane of the
> objective.  Will it affect the PSF of confocal images.  It is a fiddly
> and expensive bit to remove and I worry about doing so if there is not
> going to be image degradation.
>
>  Thanks for your help, John.
>
>
>  Ian Dobbie wrote:    [hidden email] writes:
> 4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal
> Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and it can
> be combined with fluorescence. However, because the microscope system was
> designed for light to traverse through two interference filters, when
> this optical system is applied to a confocal microscope there is
> distortion in the fluorescence signals. The fluorescent light traverses
> the interference contrast filter and excites the sample, and then the
> emitted fluorescence travels back down through the same interference
> contrast filter and back through the scan head.  The resulting image
> shows a duplication of very small particles (0.17 μ m, PSF beads) and a
> distortion of larger particles. PSF beads show two spots and 0.5 μm
> beads show an egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same
> distortion that is observed on beads will occur on biological structures
> in cells ( see Fig.  15). For optimum resolution of data that will be
> deconvoluted later, it is recommended to remove the interference filters
> when acquiring an image.            On my first reading of this I thought
> by interference contrast filter Robert was referring to the polariser. On
> a second reading I realise that it refers to the DIC prism. I wrote this
> extended reply before realising that we are saying the same thing but I
> am posting this anyway as a second description might help people
> understand what is going on and why this happens.   DIC works by sheering
> the two polarizations relative to each other with the condenser prism.
> The beams then pass through slightly different sections of the sample,
> and are recombined with the second (objective) prism. This produces an
> image of relative phase shift between the two beams.  In epi-fluorescence
> the excitation beam passes through the DIC (objective) prism and is split
> into two beams, offset relative to one another. The fluorescence from
> these two regions is them shifted back as the emission passes back
> through the (objective) DIC prism. This produces a double image shifted
> by the sheer in the DIC prism. The sheer tends to be a fraction of the
> resolution, say 1/3rd but varies with lens, manufacture etc... In
> conventional wide field this is generally not noticeable. On a properly
> set up confocal this leads to a pronounced broadening of the PSF in the
> sheer direction, at 45 degrees to the x and y sample axis.  As Robert
> says, the take home message is it is best to remove any DIC optics before
> taking confocal images.  Ian
>  --
>       Runions signature        (Sent from my cra%#y non-Blackberry
> electronic device that still has wires)  
> *********************************
>  John Runions, Ph.D.
>  School of Life Sciences
>  Oxford Brookes University
>  Oxford, UK
>  OX3 0BP
>
>  email:  [hidden email]
>  phone: +44 (0) 1865 483 964 Runions’ lab web site   Visit The
> Illuminated Plant Cell dot com
>  Oxford Brookes Master's in Bioimaging with Molecular Technology
McDonald, David L McDonald, David L
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Re: PSF with DIC

This discussion prompted me to do a few simple
image quality tests on our Deltavision system,
Olympus IX70 scope.  One thing I found was if you
collect fluorescence and DIC separately, so no
DIC components are in the light path during
fluorescence acquisition, the DIC image is
noticeably shifted laterally and doesn't line up
with the fluorescent image.  Of course you can
collect all the channels together with the DIC
stuff in the light path and there is no shift
(didn't notice any significant image degradation,
will try some more involved tests) but
fluorescent intensities are reduced by about 70%,
mainly due to the analyzer on this system.

Dave

Dave McDonald
Scientific Imaging Lab
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Avenue North, DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109
206-667-4205
http://www.fhcrc.org


At 03:18 AM 10/9/2009, you wrote:

>When using DIC with a confocal setup, there is only one part which
>interferes with the laser/emission: the objective Nomarski prism. The two
>other parts (condenser Nomarski prism, analyzer) sit in the condenser
>which is not part of the confocal beam path. A polarizer is not necessary,
>since the laser is already polarized.
>
>In Zeiss setups, you put the objective prism manually in a slit below the
>objective. And yes, in my experience it does degrade image quality. This
>is especially true if you are working at the resolution limit. For best
>image quality, you have to remove the prism. That's actually one thing I
>like at the Leica stands (i.e. DMI6000): the prism is motorized and can be
>moved out automatically between two images, which means you can set up a
>time-lapse with DIC and fluorescence images w/o the latter being worse
>than necessary.
>
>Michael
>
>
> >            Hi All,
> >
> >  After reading Ian and Robert's comments, I appreciate that there might be
> > degradation of the PSF if DIC optics are in the confocal image forming
> > pathway.  I am just a bit confused about which optical parts should be
> > removed.  Different manufacturers have different names for equivalent
> > bits.  I usually think of there being four components in the image
> > forming pathway for DIC - two polarisers, and two DIC prisms.  These
> > have various names depending on who you talk to, e.g. analyser, Wollaston
> > prism etc.
> >
> >  My question is Zeiss specific.  In their microscopes, there is a piece
> > of glass that I call the objective prism in the back focal plane of the
> > objective.  Will it affect the PSF of confocal images.  It is a fiddly
> > and expensive bit to remove and I worry about doing so if there is not
> > going to be image degradation.
> >
> >  Thanks for your help, John.
> >
> >
> >  Ian Dobbie wrote:    [hidden email] writes:
> > 4.23. Interference Contrast and Confocal
> > Interference contrast is a very useful parameter in microscopy and it can
> > be combined with fluorescence. However, because the microscope system was
> > designed for light to traverse through two interference filters, when
> > this optical system is applied to a confocal microscope there is
> > distortion in the fluorescence signals. The fluorescent light traverses
> > the interference contrast filter and excites the sample, and then the
> > emitted fluorescence travels back down through the same interference
> > contrast filter and back through the scan head.  The resulting image
> > shows a duplication of very small particles (0.17 μ m, PSF beads) and a
> > distortion of larger particles. PSF beads show two spots and 0.5 μm
> > beads show an egg shaped image instead of a round image. The same
> > distortion that is observed on beads will occur on biological structures
> > in cells ( see Fig.  15). For optimum resolution of data that will be
> > deconvoluted later, it is recommended to remove the interference filters
> > when acquiring an image.            On my first reading of this I thought
> > by interference contrast filter Robert was referring to the polariser. On
> > a second reading I realise that it refers to the DIC prism. I wrote this
> > extended reply before realising that we are saying the same thing but I
> > am posting this anyway as a second description might help people
> > understand what is going on and why this happens.   DIC works by sheering
> > the two polarizations relative to each other with the condenser prism.
> > The beams then pass through slightly different sections of the sample,
> > and are recombined with the second (objective) prism. This produces an
> > image of relative phase shift between the two beams.  In epi-fluorescence
> > the excitation beam passes through the DIC (objective) prism and is split
> > into two beams, offset relative to one another. The fluorescence from
> > these two regions is them shifted back as the emission passes back
> > through the (objective) DIC prism. This produces a double image shifted
> > by the sheer in the DIC prism. The sheer tends to be a fraction of the
> > resolution, say 1/3rd but varies with lens, manufacture etc... In
> > conventional wide field this is generally not noticeable. On a properly
> > set up confocal this leads to a pronounced broadening of the PSF in the
> > sheer direction, at 45 degrees to the x and y sample axis.  As Robert
> > says, the take home message is it is best to remove any DIC optics before
> > taking confocal images.  Ian
> >  --
> >       Runions signature        (Sent from my cra%#y non-Blackberry
> > electronic device that still has wires) Â
> > *********************************
> >  John Runions, Ph.D.
> >  School of Life Sciences
> >  Oxford Brookes University
> >  Oxford, UK
> >  OX3 0BP
> >
> >  email:Â  [hidden email]
> >  phone: +44 (0) 1865 483 964 Runions’ lab web site   Visit The
> > Illuminated Plant Cell dot com
> >  Oxford Brookes Master's in Bioimaging with Molecular Technology
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