AI Article Synopsis

  • Lensless biological imaging systems offer a wider field of view compared to traditional microscopes, which usually sacrifice this for higher magnification.
  • A new lens-based system aims to match the wide field of view of lensless setups by employing a unique compound lens design.
  • The study rigorously compares the two optical systems using the same imaging device and software, focusing on the essential principles required for effective biological imaging and future cost-effective designs.

Article Abstract

Lensless biological imaging systems are an emerging alternative to conventional microscopic systems because they enable a wide field of view imaging. While most microscopic systems sacrifice the field of view for magnification, lensless systems have taken advantage of small imaging pixel size, projection, digital magnification, and post-processing to compensate for diffracted images. A new lens-based system is designed to have the exact same wide field of view as that of a basic lensless setup. A new compound lens system design is utilized to achieve an explicit aim to have the same fields of view as the lensless setup. Then the characteristics of these two optical imaging setups (lensless and lens-based setups) are compared at this level of complexity to see what the minimal systems principles are needed to achieve the biological imaging goals for simplified and less expensive future designs. For both imaging systems, images of biological entities are recorded with the help of the same CMOS imaging device and computer software. The main contribution of this work is an exhaustive comparison between the performance characteristics of both systems using optical standards and biological images.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7472995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.optlaseng.2020.106326DOI Listing

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