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Adaptive optics in super-resolution microscopy

Jingyu Wang, Yongdeng Zhang

2021Biophysics Reports17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fluorescence microscopy has become a routine tool in biology for interrogating life activities with minimal perturbation. While the resolution of fluorescence microscopy is in theory governed only by the diffraction of light, the resolution obtainable in practice is also constrained by the presence of optical aberrations. The past two decades have witnessed the advent of super-resolution microscopy that overcomes the diffraction barrier, enabling numerous biological investigations at the nanoscale. Adaptive optics, a technique borrowed from astronomical imaging, has been applied to correct for optical aberrations in essentially every microscopy modality, especially in super-resolution microscopy in the last decade, to restore optimal image quality and resolution. In this review, we briefly introduce the fundamental concepts of adaptive optics and the operating principles of the major super-resolution imaging techniques. We highlight some recent implementations and advances in adaptive optics for active and dynamic aberration correction in super-resolution microscopy.

Topics & Concepts

MicroscopyResolution (logic)OpticsAdaptive opticsLight sheet fluorescence microscopyDiffractionSuper-resolution microscopyFluorescence microscopeNanotechnologyPhysicsComputer scienceMaterials scienceScanning confocal electron microscopyArtificial intelligenceFluorescenceAdvanced Fluorescence Microscopy TechniquesImage Processing Techniques and ApplicationsDigital Holography and Microscopy
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