About: Microscopy is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 23088 publications have been published within this topic receiving 660684 citations. The topic is also known as: Microscopy.
TL;DR: The fluorescence emission increased quadratically with the excitation intensity so that fluorescence and photo-bleaching were confined to the vicinity of the focal plane as expected for cooperative two-photon excitation.
Abstract: Molecular excitation by the simultaneous absorption of two photons provides intrinsic three-dimensional resolution in laser scanning fluorescence microscopy. The excitation of fluorophores having single-photon absorption in the ultraviolet with a stream of strongly focused subpicosecond pulses of red laser light has made possible fluorescence images of living cells and other microscopic objects. The fluorescence emission increased quadratically with the excitation intensity so that fluorescence and photo-bleaching were confined to the vicinity of the focal plane as expected for cooperative two-photon excitation. This technique also provides unprecedented capabilities for three-dimensional, spatially resolved photochemistry, particularly photolytic release of caged effector molecules.
TL;DR: In this paper, surface microscopy using vacuum tunneling has been demonstrated for the first time, and topographic pictures of surfaces on an atomic scale have been obtained for CaIrSn 4 and Au.
Abstract: Surface microscopy using vacuum tunneling is demonstrated for the first time. Topographic pictures of surfaces on an atomic scale have been obtained. Examples of resolved monoatomic steps and surface reconstructions are shown for (110) surfaces of CaIrSn 4 and Au.
TL;DR: Methods for Three-Dimensional Imaging and Tutorial on Practical Confocal Microscopy and Use of the Confocal Test Specimen.
Abstract: Foundations of Confocal Scanned Imaging in Light Microscopy -- Fundamental Limits in Confocal Microscopy -- Special Optical Elements -- Points, Pixels, and Gray Levels: Digitizing Image Data -- Laser Sources for Confocal Microscopy -- Non-Laser Light Sources for Three-Dimensional Microscopy -- Objective Lenses for Confocal Microscopy -- The Contrast Formation in Optical Microscopy -- The Intermediate Optical System of Laser-Scanning Confocal Microscopes -- Disk-Scanning Confocal Microscopy -- Measuring the Real Point Spread Function of High Numerical Aperture Microscope Objective Lenses -- Photon Detectors for Confocal Microscopy -- Structured Illumination Methods -- Visualization Systems for Multi-Dimensional Microscopy Images -- Automated Three-Dimensional Image Analysis Methods for Confocal Microscopy -- Fluorophores for Confocal Microscopy: Photophysics and Photochemistry -- Practical Considerations in the Selection and Application of Fluorescent Probes -- Guiding Principles of Specimen Preservation for Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy -- Confocal Microscopy of Living Cells -- Aberrations in Confocal and Multi-Photon Fluorescence Microscopy Induced by Refractive Index Mismatch -- Interaction of Light with Botanical Specimens -- Signal-to-Noise Ratio in Confocal Microscopes -- Comparison of Widefield/Deconvolution and Confocal Microscopy for Three-Dimensional Imaging -- Blind Deconvolution -- Image Enhancement by Deconvolution -- Fiber-Optics in Scanning Optical Microscopy -- Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging in Scanning Microscopy -- Multi-Photon Molecular Excitation in Laser-Scanning Microscopy -- Multifocal Multi-Photon Microscopy -- 4Pi Microscopy -- Nanoscale Resolution with Focused Light: Stimulated Emission Depletion and Other Reversible Saturable Optical Fluorescence Transitions Microscopy Concepts -- Mass Storage, Display, and Hard Copy -- Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering Microscopy -- Related Methods for Three-Dimensional Imaging -- Tutorial on Practical Confocal Microscopy and Use of the Confocal Test Specimen -- Practical Confocal Microscopy -- Selective Plane Illumination Microscopy -- Cell Damage During Multi-Photon Microscopy -- Photobleaching -- Nonlinear (Harmonic Generation) Optical Microscopy -- Imaging Brain Slices -- Fluorescent Ion Measurement -- Confocal and Multi-Photon Imaging of Living Embryos -- Imaging Plant Cells -- Practical Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer or Molecular Nanobioscopy of Living Cells -- Automated Confocal Imaging and High-Content Screening for Cytomics -- Automated Interpretation of Subcellular Location Patterns from Three-Dimensional Confocal Microscopy -- Display and Presentation Software -- When Light Microscope Resolution Is Not Enough:Correlational Light Microscopy and Electron Microscopy -- Databases for Two- and Three-Dimensional Microscopical Images in Biology -- Confocal Microscopy of Biofilms — Spatiotemporal Approaches -- Bibliography of Confocal Microscopy.
TL;DR: Fundamental concepts of nonlinear microscopy are reviewed and conditions relevant for achieving large imaging depths in intact tissue are discussed.
Abstract: With few exceptions biological tissues strongly scatter light, making high-resolution deep imaging impossible for traditional⎯including confocal⎯fluorescence microscopy. Nonlinear optical microscopy, in particular two photon–excited fluorescence microscopy, has overcome this limitation, providing large depth penetration mainly because even multiply scattered signal photons can be assigned to their origin as the result of localized nonlinear signal generation. Two-photon microscopy thus allows cellular imaging several hundred microns deep in various organs of living animals. Here we review fundamental concepts of nonlinear microscopy and discuss conditions relevant for achieving large imaging depths in intact tissue.
TL;DR: Multiphoton microscopy has found a niche in the world of biological imaging as the best noninvasive means of fluorescence microscopy in tissue explants and living animals and its use is now increasing exponentially.
Abstract: Multiphoton microscopy (MPM) has found a niche in the world of biological imaging as the best noninvasive means of fluorescence microscopy in tissue explants and living animals. Coupled with transgenic mouse models of disease and 'smart' genetically encoded fluorescent indicators, its use is now increasing exponentially. Properly applied, it is capable of measuring calcium transients 500 microm deep in a mouse brain, or quantifying blood flow by imaging shadows of blood cells as they race through capillaries. With the multitude of possibilities afforded by variations of nonlinear optics and localized photochemistry, it is possible to image collagen fibrils directly within tissue through nonlinear scattering, or release caged compounds in sub-femtoliter volumes.