Zeiss Axiomat & table

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Masur, Sandra Masur, Sandra
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Zeiss Axiomat & table

Available immediately:
The components of a Zeiss inverted modular widefield Axiomat with cameras, bright/darkfield, phase and Nomarski optics and several objectives: 100X and 50 X planapo
The Air Suspension table for the Axiomat.

Please contact me immediately if you are interested.

Best regards,


Sandy,


Sandra K. Masur, PhD

Associate Dean for Faculty Development

http://www.mssm.edu/forfaculty/development


President, Women Faculty Group

http://www.mssm.edu/wfg


Professor, Ophthalmology

Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Box 1183

1 Gustave Levy Place

New York NY 10029-6574


telephone: 212-241-0089

fax: 212-289-5945


email: [hidden email]




Bill Miller-3 Bill Miller-3
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Re: Zeiss Axiomat & table

Dr. Masur -  I don't suppose that you are just trying to "give" it away are you?

Bill Miller

At 01:37 PM 12/4/2008 -0500, you wrote:
Available immediately:
The components of a Zeiss inverted modular widefield Axiomat with cameras, bright/darkfield, phase and Nomarski optics and several objectives: 100X and 50 X planapo
The Air Suspension table for the Axiomat.

Please contact me immediately if you are interested.

Best regards,


Sandy,


Sandra K. Masur, PhD

Associate Dean for Faculty Development

http://www.mssm.edu/forfaculty/development


President, Women Faculty Group

http://www.mssm.edu/wfg


Professor, Ophthalmology

Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Box 1183

1 Gustave Levy Place

New York NY 10029-6574


telephone: 212-241-0089

fax: 212-289-5945


email: [hidden email]


Masur, Sandra Masur, Sandra
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Re: Zeiss Axiomat & table

Can you believe - we are.
The lucky gift recipient is a group at Albert Einstein College of Medicine who responded first to the email.
Bingo!

On Dec 4, 2008, at 2:09 PM, Bill Miller wrote:

Dr. Masur -  I don't suppose that you are just trying to "give" it away are you?

Bill Miller

At 01:37 PM 12/4/2008 -0500, you wrote:
Available immediately:
The components of a Zeiss inverted modular widefield Axiomat with cameras, bright/darkfield, phase and Nomarski optics and several objectives: 100X and 50 X planapo
The Air Suspension table for the Axiomat.

Please contact me immediately if you are interested.

Best regards,


Sandy,


Sandra K. Masur, PhD

Associate Dean for Faculty Development

http://www.mssm.edu/forfaculty/development


President, Women Faculty Group

http://www.mssm.edu/wfg


Professor, Ophthalmology

Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Box 1183

1 Gustave Levy Place

New York NY 10029-6574


telephone: 212-241-0089

fax: 212-289-5945


email: [hidden email]



Robert Peterson-3-3 Robert Peterson-3-3
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Experience with FV1000 + Precision Plastics Incubation System?

Hi all,
I'm stepping out of the office for today, but I was wondering if anyone
is using the Olympus FVseries with a precision plastics incubation
system? I'm having some problems with evaporation and am looking to
bounce ideas off someone with a similar setup.
A picture of the system is here:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3018/3019557380_4634d3493e_b.jpg
Thanks!
Robert


peterson.vcf (382 bytes) Download Attachment
Marla Feller Marla Feller
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Re: Experience with FV1000 + Precision Plastics Incubation System?

I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the  
laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488  
excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675  
excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can  
someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these  
dichroics?


Marla



On Dec 9, 2008, at 8:09 AM, Robert Peterson wrote:

> Hi all,
> I'm stepping out of the office for today, but I was wondering if  
> anyone is using the Olympus FVseries with a precision plastics  
> incubation system? I'm having some problems with evaporation and am  
> looking to bounce ideas off someone with a similar setup.
> A picture of the system is here:
> http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3018/3019557380_4634d3493e_b.jpg
> Thanks!
> Robert
>
> <peterson.vcf>
Christian Müller-11 Christian Müller-11
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Re: Marla's question

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with
the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on
thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask
what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate
wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
> I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the
> laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488
> excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675
> excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can
> someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these
> dichroics?
>
>

--
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89
Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany
Julio Vazquez Julio Vazquez
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Re: Marla's question

=
I suppose Marla is using a short pass 675, designed to reflect IR excitation light to the sample, and pass the shorter wavelengths (such as 530 nm ) to the detectors. It should work just fine, as it is specifically designed for 2P use. 

We have seen similar things on our Zeiss LSM 510 confocal, where certain dichroics work better than others, sometimes unexpectedly. I guess it could be an alignment issue. I am not familiar with the Fluoview, but on the Zeiss, pinholes have to be aligned for any particular light path. Your 655 light path may not have been properly aligned.

Otherwise, you may want to ask Olympus who provides their filters and/or ask them for their specs. A 488 mirror is primarily designed to reflect the 488 line, but may also reflect other bands... traditionally, there would be no reason for a 488 mirror to transmit wavelengths around 900 nm (IR), and therefore it is not inconceivable it would work for 2P excitation....

Another (trivial ) reason is that your 488 is actually a 488/ NIR dichroic. We have such filters on our Zeiss LSM too, for instance for simultaneous 2P/VIS excitation.

--
Julio Vazquez
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N.,  mailstop DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109-1024



==

On Dec 9, 2008, at 10:48 AM, Dr. Christian M. Müller wrote:

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488 excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675 excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these dichroics?



-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89 Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany

Cameron Nowell Cameron Nowell
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Re: Experience with FV1000 + Precision Plastics Incubation System?

In reply to this post by Robert Peterson-3-3
Hi Robert,
              While i have no direct experince with your specific incubator they are all very similar. I have found that evaporation can be a really problem if the humudity of your chanber drops too low. Now humidifying the whole incubator is not a good idea as you will surely damage some of the microscope components. But you can humidify your gas supply bu bubbling your gas through one or two bottles (the first filled with water and the second empty to collect excess water in the air).
 
How exactly is your setup configured? Its a bit hard to see through the black box you have:)
 
 
Cheers
 
 
Cam
 
 
 
Cameron J. Nowell
Microscpy Manager
Centre for Advanced Microscopy
Ludwig Insttue for Cancer Research
PO Box 2008
Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, 3050
AUSTRALIA
 
Office: +61 3 9341 3155
Mobile: +61422882700
Fax: +61 3 9341 3104
 
<http://www.ludwig.edu.au/branch/research/platform/microscopy.htm>  
 

________________________________

From: Confocal Microscopy List on behalf of Robert Peterson
Sent: Wed 10/12/2008 3:09 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Experience with FV1000 + Precision Plastics Incubation System?



Hi all,
I'm stepping out of the office for today, but I was wondering if anyone
is using the Olympus FVseries with a precision plastics incubation
system? I'm having some problems with evaporation and am looking to
bounce ideas off someone with a similar setup.
A picture of the system is here:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3018/3019557380_4634d3493e_b.jpg
Thanks!
Robert
Marla Feller Marla Feller
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Re: Marla's question

In reply to this post by Julio Vazquez
To be clear, I am not stating just that the 2-photon emission goes up but rather that the intensity of the 910 nm light reaching our sample is brighter!
It must be the dichroic or the alignment.  I will follow up on those two possibilities.

thank-you,
Marla



On Dec 9, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Julio Vazquez wrote:

=
I suppose Marla is using a short pass 675, designed to reflect IR excitation light to the sample, and pass the shorter wavelengths (such as 530 nm ) to the detectors. It should work just fine, as it is specifically designed for 2P use. 

We have seen similar things on our Zeiss LSM 510 confocal, where certain dichroics work better than others, sometimes unexpectedly. I guess it could be an alignment issue. I am not familiar with the Fluoview, but on the Zeiss, pinholes have to be aligned for any particular light path. Your 655 light path may not have been properly aligned.

Otherwise, you may want to ask Olympus who provides their filters and/or ask them for their specs. A 488 mirror is primarily designed to reflect the 488 line, but may also reflect other bands... traditionally, there would be no reason for a 488 mirror to transmit wavelengths around 900 nm (IR), and therefore it is not inconceivable it would work for 2P excitation....

Another (trivial ) reason is that your 488 is actually a 488/ NIR dichroic. We have such filters on our Zeiss LSM too, for instance for simultaneous 2P/VIS excitation.

--
Julio Vazquez
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N.,  mailstop DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109-1024



==

On Dec 9, 2008, at 10:48 AM, Dr. Christian M. Müller wrote:

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488 excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675 excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these dichroics?



-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89 Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany


Guy Cox Guy Cox
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Re: Marla's question

There is a spectrum of a 488nm dichroic in Fig 3.11 of my book (below), but it
only goes out to 750 nm - it's still transmitting there.  The spectrum is of an
everyday (low cost) FITC filter set from Chroma.  But if your filters are from
Chroma they will certainly make the spectra available to you - they are very
helpful that way.  I'd imagine the other manufacturers would be, too.  So get
the maker and designation of your filter from Olympus and I'm sure you will
then be able to get the spectrum from the maker.
 
                                                                                       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 Marla Feller
Sent: Wednesday, 10 December 2008 6:56 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: Marla's question

To be clear, I am not stating just that the 2-photon emission goes up but rather that the intensity of the 910 nm light reaching our sample is brighter!
It must be the dichroic or the alignment.  I will follow up on those two possibilities.

thank-you,
Marla



On Dec 9, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Julio Vazquez wrote:

=
I suppose Marla is using a short pass 675, designed to reflect IR excitation light to the sample, and pass the shorter wavelengths (such as 530 nm ) to the detectors. It should work just fine, as it is specifically designed for 2P use. 

We have seen similar things on our Zeiss LSM 510 confocal, where certain dichroics work better than others, sometimes unexpectedly. I guess it could be an alignment issue. I am not familiar with the Fluoview, but on the Zeiss, pinholes have to be aligned for any particular light path. Your 655 light path may not have been properly aligned.

Otherwise, you may want to ask Olympus who provides their filters and/or ask them for their specs. A 488 mirror is primarily designed to reflect the 488 line, but may also reflect other bands... traditionally, there would be no reason for a 488 mirror to transmit wavelengths around 900 nm (IR), and therefore it is not inconceivable it would work for 2P excitation....

Another (trivial ) reason is that your 488 is actually a 488/ NIR dichroic. We have such filters on our Zeiss LSM too, for instance for simultaneous 2P/VIS excitation.

--
Julio Vazquez
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N.,  mailstop DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109-1024



==

On Dec 9, 2008, at 10:48 AM, Dr. Christian M. Müller wrote:

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488 excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675 excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these dichroics?



-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89 Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany



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Christian Müller-11 Christian Müller-11
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Re: Marla's question

In reply to this post by Marla Feller
If, as Julio mentions, the 675 excitation diochroic is supposed to be a low-pass, I apologize (it's me, who should have spent a second on thinking and looking up the Fluoview lightpath...).
Trying to be more constructive: to get a fast estimate of the GFP-related transmission of the dichroics you might illuminate widefield with a 505 or 515nm LED (few cents) and test the two dichroics with the same PMT-settings. However, if 910nm light is indeed dimmer at the sample with the 675 your assumptions are certainly the most valid.

Sorry, Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
To be clear, I am not stating just that the 2-photon emission goes up but rather that the intensity of the 910 nm light reaching our sample is brighter!
It must be the dichroic or the alignment.  I will follow up on those two possibilities.

thank-you,
Marla



On Dec 9, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Julio Vazquez wrote:

=
I suppose Marla is using a short pass 675, designed to reflect IR excitation light to the sample, and pass the shorter wavelengths (such as 530 nm ) to the detectors. It should work just fine, as it is specifically designed for 2P use. 

We have seen similar things on our Zeiss LSM 510 confocal, where certain dichroics work better than others, sometimes unexpectedly. I guess it could be an alignment issue. I am not familiar with the Fluoview, but on the Zeiss, pinholes have to be aligned for any particular light path. Your 655 light path may not have been properly aligned.

Otherwise, you may want to ask Olympus who provides their filters and/or ask them for their specs. A 488 mirror is primarily designed to reflect the 488 line, but may also reflect other bands... traditionally, there would be no reason for a 488 mirror to transmit wavelengths around 900 nm (IR), and therefore it is not inconceivable it would work for 2P excitation....

Another (trivial ) reason is that your 488 is actually a 488/ NIR dichroic. We have such filters on our Zeiss LSM too, for instance for simultaneous 2P/VIS excitation.

--
Julio Vazquez
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N.,  mailstop DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109-1024



==

On Dec 9, 2008, at 10:48 AM, Dr. Christian M. Müller wrote:

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488 excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675 excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these dichroics?



-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89 Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany




-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
JWG University
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7, Hs. 89/2
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany

Boswell, Carl A - (cboswell) Boswell, Carl A - (cboswell)
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Re: Marla's question

In reply to this post by Marla Feller
A look at the spectrum of dichroics, for instance on the Semrock website, shows that many mirrors work well for their intended range, but are surprisingly variable at wavelengths some distance from there.  A mirror may have significant reflective and transmission properties in the NIR, because they are not intended to function out there.  Moveover, many of the vendor websites that show the spectra for their filters/mirrors do not present data very far into the IR or UV (often starting at 400 and stopping at 750nm), so what the device is doing outside that range is anybody's guess. 
 
Carl
Carl A. Boswell, Ph.D.
Molecular and Cellular Biology
University of Arizona
520-954-7053
FAX 520-621-3709
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2008 12:56 PM
Subject: Re: Marla's question

To be clear, I am not stating just that the 2-photon emission goes up but rather that the intensity of the 910 nm light reaching our sample is brighter!
It must be the dichroic or the alignment.  I will follow up on those two possibilities.

thank-you,
Marla



On Dec 9, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Julio Vazquez wrote:

=
I suppose Marla is using a short pass 675, designed to reflect IR excitation light to the sample, and pass the shorter wavelengths (such as 530 nm ) to the detectors. It should work just fine, as it is specifically designed for 2P use. 

We have seen similar things on our Zeiss LSM 510 confocal, where certain dichroics work better than others, sometimes unexpectedly. I guess it could be an alignment issue. I am not familiar with the Fluoview, but on the Zeiss, pinholes have to be aligned for any particular light path. Your 655 light path may not have been properly aligned.

Otherwise, you may want to ask Olympus who provides their filters and/or ask them for their specs. A 488 mirror is primarily designed to reflect the 488 line, but may also reflect other bands... traditionally, there would be no reason for a 488 mirror to transmit wavelengths around 900 nm (IR), and therefore it is not inconceivable it would work for 2P excitation....

Another (trivial ) reason is that your 488 is actually a 488/ NIR dichroic. We have such filters on our Zeiss LSM too, for instance for simultaneous 2P/VIS excitation.

--
Julio Vazquez
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N.,  mailstop DE-512
Seattle, WA 98109-1024



==

On Dec 9, 2008, at 10:48 AM, Dr. Christian M. Müller wrote:

Marla,
1) I changed the thread-name, so that your question is not mixed up with the reference of the one you replied to

2) It makes a lot of sense, what you see........ just spend a second on thinking about the wavelength of your expected emission (!) - then ask what the 675-dichroic will do to that ;-)  (...it will only deviate wavelength above 675 to your detectors....).

Cheers,
Christian

Marla Feller schrieb:
I am imaging GFP using a two-photon (Olympus Fluoview300).  I have the laser tuned at 910 nm.  I accidentally found that using my 488 excitation dichroic led to much more excitation than using the 675 excitation dichroic.  This doesn't make any sense to me --  can someone tell me where I can find the absorption spectra of these dichroics?



-- 
......................................................................
Dr. Christian M. Müller
Clinical Neuroanatomy
NeuroScience Center, Hs. 89 Goethe University Frankfurt
Heinrich-Hoffmann-Str. 7
D-60528 Frankfurt/M., Germany