scholarly journals A Novel Optical Design Enabling Lightweight and Large Field-Of-View Head-Mounted Microscopes

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph R Scherrer ◽  
Galen F Lynch ◽  
Jie J Zhang ◽  
Michale S Fee

We present a novel fluorescence microscope light path that enables imaging of over a thousand neurons in freely-behaving mice and imaging in juvenile songbirds. The light path eliminates traditional illumination optics, allowing for head-mounted microscopes that have both a lower weight and a larger field-of-view (FOV) than previously possible. Using this light path, we designed two microscopes: one optimized for field-of-view (~4 mm FOV; 1.4 g), and the other optimized for weight (1.0 mm FOV; 1.0 g).

2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (9) ◽  
pp. 0922001
Author(s):  
王晓恒 Wang Xiaoheng ◽  
薛庆生 Xue Qingsheng

2013 ◽  
Vol 710 ◽  
pp. 413-418
Author(s):  
Fei Guo ◽  
Mei Zhao ◽  
Mai Yu Zhou ◽  
Ming Quan Yang ◽  
Shan Shan Cong

Objective lens is the core part of a collimator, its quality has a direct impact on the collimators quality. Due to the small field of view and low image quality requirement, general collimator objective lens is difficult to achieve the requirement of testing an aerial camera s performance. So designing a large field of view, apochromatic collimator objective lens has an important practical significance. In this paper, the major qualifications were first proposed to design the collimator objective lens,according to which the initial configuration was confirmed. Then we used the ZEMAX optical design software to optimize the initial structure and normalized the optimized structural parameters. Finally the image quality of collimator objective lens was evaluated to make it achieve the requirement of qualifications.


Author(s):  
Che-Hang Yu ◽  
Jeffrey N. Stirman ◽  
Yiyi Yu ◽  
Riichiro Hira ◽  
Spencer L. Smith

AbstractImaging the activity of neurons that are widely distributed across brain regions deep in scattering tissue at high speed remains challenging. Here, we introduce an open-source system with Dual Independent Enhanced Scan Engines for Large Field-of-view Two-Photon imaging (Diesel2p). Combining novel optical design, adaptive optics, and temporal multiplexing, the system offers subcellular resolution over a large field-of-view (∼ 25 mm2) with independent scan engines. We demonstrate the flexibility and various use cases of this system for calcium imaging of neurons in the living brain.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changliang Guo ◽  
Garrett J. Blair ◽  
Megha Sehgal ◽  
Federico N. Sangiuliano Jimka ◽  
Arash Bellafard ◽  
...  

We present a large field of view (FOV) open-source miniature microscope (MiniLFOV) designed to extend the capabilities of the UCLA Miniscope platform to large-scale, single cell resolution neural imaging in freely behaving large rodents and head-fixed mice. This system is capable of multiple imaging configurations, including deep brain imaging using implanted optical probes and cortical imaging through cranial windows. The MiniLFOV interfaces with existing open-source UCLA Miniscope DAQ hardware and software, can achieve single cell resolution imaging across a 3.6 × 2.7 mm field of view at 23 frames per second, has an electrically adjustable working distance of up to 3.5 mm±150 µm using an onboard electrowetting lens, incorporates an absolute head-orientation sensor, and weighs under 14 grams. The MiniLFOV provides a 30-fold larger FOV and yields 20-fold better sensitivity than Miniscope V3, and a 12-fold larger FOV with 2-fold better sensitivity than Miniscope V4. Power and data transmission are handled through a single, flexible coaxial cable down to 0.3 mm in diameter facilitating naturalistic behavior. We validated the MiniLFOV in freely behaving rats by simultaneously imaging >1000 GCaMP7s expressing neurons in the CA1 layer of the hippocampus and in head-fixed mice by simultaneously imaging ~2000 neurons in the mouse dorsal cortex through a 4 × 4 mm cranial window. For freely behaving experiments, the MiniLFOV supports optional wire-free operation using a 3.5 g wire-free data acquisition expansion board which enables close to 1-hour of wire-free recording with a 400 mAh (7.5 g) on-board single-cell lithium-polymer battery and expands wire-free imaging techniques to larger animal models. We expect this new open-source implementation of the UCLA Miniscope platform will enable researchers to address novel hypotheses concerning brain function in freely behaving animals.


2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (12) ◽  
pp. 1218001
Author(s):  
赵宇宸 Zhao Yuchen ◽  
何 欣 He Xin ◽  
张 凯 Zhang Kai ◽  
刘 强 Liu Qiang ◽  
崔永鹏 Cui Yongpeng ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Dan Jing ◽  
Zhen Yang ◽  
Jieqiong Lin ◽  
Yan Gu ◽  
Minghui Gao

2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (7) ◽  
pp. 722003
Author(s):  
于晓丹 YU Xiao-dan ◽  
张远杰 ZHANG Yuan-jie ◽  
王元元 WANG Yuan-yuan ◽  
许黄蓉 XU Huang-rong ◽  
鱼卫星 YU Wei-xing

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaun Pacheco ◽  
Chengliang Wang ◽  
Monica K. Chawla ◽  
Minhkhoi Nguyen ◽  
Brend K. Baggett ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing-Yan Li ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Shi-Yu Yan ◽  
Bin Zhang ◽  
Chun-Hui Wang

Abstract 3D lidar has been widely used in various fields. The MEMS scanning system is one of its most important components, while the limitation of scanning angle is the main obstacle for its application in various fields to improve the demerit. In this paper, a folded large field of view scanning optical system is proposed. The structure and parameters of the system are determined by theoretical derivation of ray tracing. The optical design software Zemax is used to design the system. After optimization, the final structure performs well in collimation and beam expansion. The results show that the scan angle can be expanded from ±5° to ±26.5°, and finally parallel light scanning is realized. The spot diagram at a distance of 100 mm from the exit surface shows that the maximum radius of the spot is 0.506 mm with a uniformly distributed spot. The maximum radius of the spot at 100 m is 19 cm, and the diffusion angle is less than 2 mrad. The energy concentration in the spot range is greater than 90% with a high system energy concentration, and the parallelism is good. This design overcomes the shortcoming of the small mechanical scanning angle of the MEMS lidar, and has good performance in collimation and beam expansion. It provides a design method for large-scale application of MEMS lidar.


2020 ◽  
pp. short49-1-short49-7
Author(s):  
Anastasiya Kozhina ◽  
Evgeniia Soshnicova ◽  
Alla Uvarova

The article presents a new scheme of an optical microscope. The proposed scheme contains two channels: one works with a wide field of view, the other forms a high-resolution image. The simultaneous fulfillment of these conditions significantly increases the information capacity of the system. The proposed scheme overcomes the limitations imposed by the Lagrange invariant. In addition, the presented work solves the relevant task of optical instrumentation: using one device,it becomes possible to simultaneously obtain an image of an object in two scales, one of which gives a detailed image of microstructures, and the other shows the state of the area around the part of the object being studied in detail. This time synchronization is especially important for studying biological objects. The design features of the optical scheme make it possible to abandon the refocusing of the objective, which is necessary in biological microscopes when the magnification is changed. Thus, the proposed system solves not only scientific and technical tasks, but also improves the ergonomics of work in microscopy.


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