Optical imaging has served as a primary method to collect information about biosystems across scales—from functionalities of tissues to morphological structures of cells and even at biomolecular levels.However,to ade...Optical imaging has served as a primary method to collect information about biosystems across scales—from functionalities of tissues to morphological structures of cells and even at biomolecular levels.However,to adequately characterize a complex biosystem,an imaging system with a number of resolvable points,referred to as a space-bandwidth product(SBP),in excess of one billion is typically needed.Since a gigapixel-scale far exceeds the capacity of current optical imagers,compromises must be made to obtain either a low spatial resolution or a narrow field-of-view(FOV).The problem originates from constituent refractive optics—the larger the aperture,the more challenging the correction of lens aberrations.Therefore,it is impractical for a conventional optical imaging system to achieve an SBP over hundreds of millions.To address this unmet need,a variety of high-SBP imagers have emerged over the past decade,enabling an unprecedented resolution and FOV beyond the limit of conventional optics.We provide a comprehensive survey of high-SBP imaging techniques,exploring their underlying principles and applications in bioimaging.展开更多
基金supported partially by the National Institutes of Health(R01EY029397,R35GM128761)the National Science Foundation(1652150)+1 种基金support from the Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea(NRF)funded by the Ministry of Education(2019R1A6A3A03031505)support from the National Science Foundation(1846784)。
文摘Optical imaging has served as a primary method to collect information about biosystems across scales—from functionalities of tissues to morphological structures of cells and even at biomolecular levels.However,to adequately characterize a complex biosystem,an imaging system with a number of resolvable points,referred to as a space-bandwidth product(SBP),in excess of one billion is typically needed.Since a gigapixel-scale far exceeds the capacity of current optical imagers,compromises must be made to obtain either a low spatial resolution or a narrow field-of-view(FOV).The problem originates from constituent refractive optics—the larger the aperture,the more challenging the correction of lens aberrations.Therefore,it is impractical for a conventional optical imaging system to achieve an SBP over hundreds of millions.To address this unmet need,a variety of high-SBP imagers have emerged over the past decade,enabling an unprecedented resolution and FOV beyond the limit of conventional optics.We provide a comprehensive survey of high-SBP imaging techniques,exploring their underlying principles and applications in bioimaging.