http://confocal-microscopy-list.275.s1.nabble.com/Near-IR-luminescence-observed-from-Microscope-Objectives-tp4759825p4805964.html
I can just share a similar obervation on our system. We were using
trying to calibrate the system for the FCS experiments. What we
diminished almost to the background level. We still don't know what
> It scales approximately linearly.
>
> Thanks for a response
> -Arnold E.
> On Mar 18, 2010, at 11:32 PM, Guy Cox wrote:
>
> Interesting. Does the luminescence intensity scale linearly or
> quadratically with excitation?
>
> Guy
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:
[hidden email]]
> On Behalf Of Arnold Estrada
> Sent: Friday, 19 March 2010 9:01 AM
> To:
[hidden email]
> Subject: Near IR luminescence observed from Microscope Objectives.
>
> In the process of trying to make phosphorescent lifetime measurements
> from a very week signal, I have observed that all of my microscope
> objectives seem to luminesce in the near-infrared. My research involves
> using two-photon excitation of phosphorescent probes with very small
> two-photon action cross-sections. Consequently my excitation source is
> a gated Ti:Sapphire (@ 800 nm) such that the excitation reaches the
> sample (or objective in this case) for 20 microseconds out of every two
> milliseconds. The laser power reaching the objective is about 400 mW
> while the gating is on. Using a spectrometer, I have confirmed that
> this luminescence extends from ~ 700nm to greater than 850 nm. The
> presence of the anti-stokes shifted light implies some sort of
> multi-photon absorption mechanism. However, I observe this luminescence
> whether the laser is mode locked or not. I have also observed that the
> luminescence process appears to have a lifetime of ~ 60-80 uS. Has
> anyone else ever observed this? I have observed this with other lenses
> (not microscope objectives) as well. Is it possible that the high laser
> power used is causing a multi-step absorption process followed by
> luminescence from the metal dopants in the high index glass in the
> objective?
>
> Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>
> ---
> Arnold D. Estrada.
>
> Doctoral Candidate
> Department of Biomedical Engineering
> The University of Texas at Austin
> Biomedical Engineering Bldg, 1.324
> 107 W. Dean Keaton Street
> Austin, TX 78712
>
> Office Phone (512) 471-2071
> Lab Phone (512) 471-1532
> Cell Phone: (512) 731-4298
>