Although modern optical microscopy allows the achievement of sub-diffraction resolution, most of the current techniques rely on a fluorescence contrast mechanism. Moreover, deep tissue imaging remains a challenging task especially for thick and highly scattering biological objects. The infrared absorption/saturation microscopy method is designed to overcome these issues [1, 2], having InfraRed Nanoscopy (IRN) as an instrumental perspective. The main idea behind IRN is an absorption/saturation effect similar to conventional pump-probe in which the first pump beam modifies the carrier density inside the sample, followed by intensity changes in the transmitted probe beam.

Development of the pump-probe nanoscopy architecture

KOROBCHEVSKAYA, KSENIYA;DIASPRO, ALBERTO GIOVANNI
2014-01-01

Abstract

Although modern optical microscopy allows the achievement of sub-diffraction resolution, most of the current techniques rely on a fluorescence contrast mechanism. Moreover, deep tissue imaging remains a challenging task especially for thick and highly scattering biological objects. The infrared absorption/saturation microscopy method is designed to overcome these issues [1, 2], having InfraRed Nanoscopy (IRN) as an instrumental perspective. The main idea behind IRN is an absorption/saturation effect similar to conventional pump-probe in which the first pump beam modifies the carrier density inside the sample, followed by intensity changes in the transmitted probe beam.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/813100
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