We demonstrate a volumetric two-photon microscopy (TPM) using the non-diffracting Airy beam as illumination. Direct mapping of the imaging trajectory shows that the Airy beam extends the axial imaging range around six times longer than a traditional Gaussian beam does along the propagation direction, while maintaining a comparable lateral width. Benefiting from its non-diffracting nature, the TPM with Airy beam illumination is able not only to capture a volumetric image within a single frame, but also to acquire image structures behind a strongly scattered medium. The volumetric specimen is mapped layer by layer under Gaussian mode, while the three-dimensional structure is projected to a single two-dimensional image under Airy mode, leading to a significantly increased acquisition speed. The performance of the TPM is evaluated employing a phantom of agarose gel imbedding fluorescent beads as well as a mouse brain slice. Finally, we showcase the penetration ability of the developed Airy TPM by imaging through a scattering environment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.44.000391 | DOI Listing |
Appl Biochem Biotechnol
December 2024
Department of General Surgery, Tianjin Children's Hospital, Beichen District, Longyan Road 238, Tianjin, 300134, China.
This work presents the generation of an Airy beam by a leaky-wave structure (LWS) designed from a substrate-integrated waveguide (SIW) with dimension-varying slots. The Airy beam is radiated by judiciously designing the length of the slots to modulate the phase distribution. Compared to Airy beams generated by phased array antennas or metasurfaces, no complex feeding network associated with phase shifters and no space-wave illumination is required, thus allowing one to reach a low-profile structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this paper, the dynamics of the circular Airy beam (CAB) in the spatial fractional nonlinear Schrödinger equation (FNLSE) optical system are investigated. The propagation characteristics of CABs modulated by the quadratic phase modulation (QPM) in a Kerr (cubic) nonlinear medium under power function diffractive modulation modes and parabolic potentials are numerically simulated by using a step-by-step Fourier method. Specifically, the threshold for CABs to form solitons in the Kerr medium is controlled by the Lévy index and the QPM coefficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectron Airy beams and electron vortex beams are commonly generated using phase masks that imprint a transverse modulation on the particle wave function. Plasmons sustained by nanostructured conductors facilitate substantial interactions with free electrons, enabling considerable transverse modulation of the electron wave function. Consequently, electron Airy and vortex beams can also be produced through interactions between electrons and structured plasmonic fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical pulling along straight trajectories has been successfully demonstrated for both dipolar and Mie particles using optical gradient and/or scattering forces over the past decade. However, much less attention is devoted to the pulling along curved paths, particularly for Mie particles, since the mechanism of continuous attraction based on intensity gradients is effective only for dipolar particles, thus limiting its practical applications. Here, we demonstrate the optical pulling of Mie particles with gain along a parabolic trajectory immersed in a two-dimensional vector Airy beam.
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