Paper
14 October 2005 Design of a microscopy illumination using a partial coherent light source
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Abstract
A homogeneous illumination of a microscope requires a homogeneous intensity distribution in the field plane and in the pupil plane. An inhomogeneity in the pupil gives rise to a distortion in the image. This distortion is more clearly seen in defocused image planes and is commonly misinterpreted as classical aberration. An inhomogeneous intensity distribution in the field plane causes for example a line thickness variation of an imaged structure. In classical microscopy which operates with classical light sources, for example spiral-wound filaments, the task of designing a homogenised illumination can be solved using geometrical optics. Using instead of an incoherent a partial coherent light source may lead to interferences in the pupil and in the field plane which represent the major problem of such illumination systems. We present simulated results concerning the propagation of partial coherent light. The lateral and temporal coherence of a multimode laser was determined experimentally. With these results simulations were done using partial coherent beams. The considered optical components include lenslet arrays and diffractive optical elements.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Matthias Wald, Matthias Burkhardt, Alexander Pesch, Herbert Gross, and Jörn Greif "Design of a microscopy illumination using a partial coherent light source", Proc. SPIE 5962, Optical Design and Engineering II, 59621G (14 October 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.625353
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Cited by 9 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Diffractive optical elements

Light sources

Fourier transforms

Optical components

Microscopy

Speckle

Diffraction

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