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Light microscopy at maximal precision

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

M. Bierbaum
B.D. Leahy
A.A. Alemi
Itai Cohen
J.P. Sethna

Abstract

Microscopy is the workhorse of the physical and life sciences, producing crisp images of everything from atoms to cells well beyond the capabilities of the human eye. However, the analysis of these images is frequently little more accurate than manual marking. Here, we revolutionize the analysis of microscopy images, extracting all the useful information theoretically contained in a complex microscope image. Using a generic, methodological approach, we extract the information by fitting experimental images with a detailed optical model of the microscope, a method we call parameter extraction from reconstructing images (PERI). As a proof of principle, we demonstrate this approach with a confocal image of colloidal spheres, improving measurements of particle positions and radii by 10-100 times over current methods and attaining the maximum possible accuracy. With this unprecedented accuracy, we measure nanometer-scale colloidal interactions in dense suspensions solely with light microscopy, a previously impossible feat. Our approach is generic and applicable to imaging methods from brightfield to electron microscopy, where we expect accuracies of 1 nm and 0.1 pm, respectively.

Date Published

Journal

Physical Review X

Volume

7

Issue

4

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85032177396&doi=10.1103%2fPhysRevX.7.041007&partnerID=40&md5=0b5efc4458dcd05b8db23344da0df35b

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041007

Group (Lab)

Itai Cohen Group
James Sethna Group

Funding Source

1053575
1120296
DMR-1120296
DMR-1507607
ACI-1053575
PRF 56046-ND7

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