A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope

Superresolution depends on near-field capture and transfer of high spatial frequencies from the scattering object. These evanescent waves are transferred to a near-field image domain using a negative index material. Measuring images with subwavelength scale resolution in the near field by scanning i...

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Main Authors: Fiddy, Michael A., Chuang, Yi-Chen, Dudley, Richard
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104226
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16980
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1042262020-03-07T14:00:37Z A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope Fiddy, Michael A. Chuang, Yi-Chen Dudley, Richard School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic systems::Signal processing Superresolution depends on near-field capture and transfer of high spatial frequencies from the scattering object. These evanescent waves are transferred to a near-field image domain using a negative index material. Measuring images with subwavelength scale resolution in the near field by scanning is not practical and ignores inevitable object–lens–image coupling phenomena as well as the need to employ inverse scattering algorithms. An alternative approach based on compressive sampling permits the use of a single fixed detector. Traditionally, in such a system, an image-bearing wavefront is projected onto a series of patterns (= basis functions) and the transmitted light integrated by a lens onto a single-point detector. Image reconstruction is possible by weighting each basis function with its measured coefficient and summing, including basis functions representing evanescent waves. We employ a single fixed detector in the back focal plane of a negative index concave lens and basis functions realized by structured illumination from combinations of a set of discrete sources. We have investigated this as an approach to recover subwavelength scale details about a scattering object and report our results. 2013-10-28T08:04:19Z 2019-12-06T21:28:38Z 2013-10-28T08:04:19Z 2019-12-06T21:28:38Z 2013 2013 Journal Article Chuang, Y.-C., Dudley, R., & Fiddy, M. A. (2013). A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope. Applied physics A, 112(3), 575-582. 0947-8396 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104226 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16980 10.1007/s00339-013-7741-0 en Applied physics A
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic systems::Signal processing
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electronic systems::Signal processing
Fiddy, Michael A.
Chuang, Yi-Chen
Dudley, Richard
A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
description Superresolution depends on near-field capture and transfer of high spatial frequencies from the scattering object. These evanescent waves are transferred to a near-field image domain using a negative index material. Measuring images with subwavelength scale resolution in the near field by scanning is not practical and ignores inevitable object–lens–image coupling phenomena as well as the need to employ inverse scattering algorithms. An alternative approach based on compressive sampling permits the use of a single fixed detector. Traditionally, in such a system, an image-bearing wavefront is projected onto a series of patterns (= basis functions) and the transmitted light integrated by a lens onto a single-point detector. Image reconstruction is possible by weighting each basis function with its measured coefficient and summing, including basis functions representing evanescent waves. We employ a single fixed detector in the back focal plane of a negative index concave lens and basis functions realized by structured illumination from combinations of a set of discrete sources. We have investigated this as an approach to recover subwavelength scale details about a scattering object and report our results.
author2 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
author_facet School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Fiddy, Michael A.
Chuang, Yi-Chen
Dudley, Richard
format Article
author Fiddy, Michael A.
Chuang, Yi-Chen
Dudley, Richard
author_sort Fiddy, Michael A.
title A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
title_short A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
title_full A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
title_fullStr A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
title_full_unstemmed A new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
title_sort new approach to a practical subwavelength resolving microscope
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104226
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/16980
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