Optical lenses reached the limit of resolution set by the wavelength of light more than a century ago. However, no attempt was made to achieve the maximum resolution in the case of low-magnification lenses, probably because the visual image would then have contained detail too fine to be perceived by the human eye. Currently available lenses of less than 10x magnification are of simple construction and their numerical apertures are 0.2 or less, as compared with 1.3 or more in high-power lenses. They are adequate for the eye or a standard camera, but thin confocal optical sections are not possible because of the low numerical aperture. We have developed a novel lens system called the Mesolens, which, with a magnification of 4x and an N.A. of...
Scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO) employs the eye's optics as a microscope objective for retinal i...
Optical microscopy has long been an established tool in the biomedical sciences, being the preferred...
ning mechanisms can be made sufficiently small. This method Previously, a laser scanning confocal mi...
Optical lenses reached the limit of resolution set by the wavelength of light more than a century ag...
Current optical microscope objectives of low magnification have low numerical aperture and therefore...
In a previous paper (McConnell et al., 2016) we showed a new giant lens called the Mesolens and pres...
Rapid imaging of large biological tissue specimens such as ultrathick sections of mouse brain cannot...
In 2015, we launched the mesoSPIM initiative (www.mesospim.org), an open-source project aimed at mak...
A new approach in optical architecture promises small-scale, high-resolution in vivo imaging for med...
Visualizing developing organ formation as well as progession and treatment of disease often heavily ...
AbstractReal-time in vivo imaging of molecular targets at (sub)cellular resolution is essential in b...
Optical mesoscale imaging is a rapidly developing field that allows the visualisation of larger samp...
Scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO) employs the eye's optics as a microscope objective for retinal i...
Optical microscopy has long been an established tool in the biomedical sciences, being the preferred...
ning mechanisms can be made sufficiently small. This method Previously, a laser scanning confocal mi...
Optical lenses reached the limit of resolution set by the wavelength of light more than a century ag...
Current optical microscope objectives of low magnification have low numerical aperture and therefore...
In a previous paper (McConnell et al., 2016) we showed a new giant lens called the Mesolens and pres...
Rapid imaging of large biological tissue specimens such as ultrathick sections of mouse brain cannot...
In 2015, we launched the mesoSPIM initiative (www.mesospim.org), an open-source project aimed at mak...
A new approach in optical architecture promises small-scale, high-resolution in vivo imaging for med...
Visualizing developing organ formation as well as progession and treatment of disease often heavily ...
AbstractReal-time in vivo imaging of molecular targets at (sub)cellular resolution is essential in b...
Optical mesoscale imaging is a rapidly developing field that allows the visualisation of larger samp...
Scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO) employs the eye's optics as a microscope objective for retinal i...
Optical microscopy has long been an established tool in the biomedical sciences, being the preferred...
ning mechanisms can be made sufficiently small. This method Previously, a laser scanning confocal mi...