Bellair C J, Curl C L, Allman B E, Harris P J, Roberts A, Delbridge L M D, Nugent K A
School of Physics, The University of Melbourne, Vic. 3010, Australia.
J Microsc. 2004 Apr;214(Pt 1):62-9. doi: 10.1111/j.0022-2720.2004.01302.x.
The ability to image phase distributions with high spatial resolution is a key capability of microscopy systems. Consequently, the development and use of phase microscopy has been an important aspect of microscopy research and development. Most phase microscopy is based on a form of interference. Some phase imaging techniques, such as differential interference microscopy or phase microscopy, have a low coherence requirement, which enables high-resolution imaging but in effect prevents the acquisition of quantitative phase information. These techniques are therefore used mainly for phase visualization. On the other hand, interference microscopy and holography are able to yield quantitative phase measurements but cannot offer the highest resolution. A new approach to phase microscopy, quantitative phase-amplitude microscopy (QPAM) has recently been proposed that relies on observing the manner in which intensity images change with small defocuses and using these intensity changes to recover the phase. The method is easily understood when an object is thin, meaning its thickness is much less than the depth of field of the imaging system. However, in practice, objects will not often be thin, leading to the question of what precisely is being measured when QPAM is applied to a thick object. The optical transfer function formalism previously developed uses three-dimensional (3D) optical transfer functions under the Born approximation. In this paper we use the 3D optical transfer function approach of Streibl not for the analysis of 3D imaging methods, such as tomography, but rather for the problem of analysing 2D phase images of thick objects. We go on to test the theoretical predictions experimentally. The two are found to be in excellent agreement and we show that the 3D imaging properties of QPAM can be reliably predicted using the optical transfer function formalism.
以高空间分辨率对相位分布进行成像的能力是显微镜系统的一项关键能力。因此,相衬显微镜的开发与应用一直是显微镜研发的一个重要方面。大多数相衬显微镜基于一种干涉形式。一些相成像技术,如微分干涉显微镜或相衬显微镜,对相干性的要求较低,这使得能够进行高分辨率成像,但实际上却无法获取定量的相位信息。因此,这些技术主要用于相位可视化。另一方面,干涉显微镜和全息术能够进行定量的相位测量,但无法提供最高分辨率。最近有人提出了一种相衬显微镜的新方法,即定量相幅显微镜(QPAM),它依赖于观察强度图像随小离焦量的变化方式,并利用这些强度变化来恢复相位。当物体很薄,即其厚度远小于成像系统的景深时,该方法很容易理解。然而,在实际中,物体通常不会很薄,这就引出了一个问题,即当QPAM应用于厚物体时究竟测量的是什么。先前开发的光学传递函数形式体系在玻恩近似下使用三维(3D)光学传递函数。在本文中,我们使用施特雷布尔的3D光学传递函数方法,不是用于分析三维成像方法,如断层扫描,而是用于分析厚物体二维相位图像的问题。我们接着通过实验来检验理论预测。结果发现二者高度吻合,并且我们表明可以使用光学传递函数形式体系可靠地预测QPAM的三维成像特性。