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Event Series Event Series: ReMade@ARI Webinars

Hyperspectral Imaging and microscopy

September 27 @ 10:00 - 11:00

Zoom webinar | Replay on Youtube

 

Cristian Manzoni,
IFN-CNR & Polimi, Italy

Spectral imaging, also known as imaging spectroscopy, refers to methods and devices for acquiring a complete light spectrum for each point in the image of a scene. It provides much richer information with respect to standard imaging, enabling to identify materials or detect dynamical processes. Spectral imaging has been applied to a wide range of scientific investigations, such as remote sensing, pigment determination in biology, medicine, coastal ocean imaging, water analysis, agriculture, cultural heritage and archaeology, just to cite a few. In particular, hyperspectral imaging aims at acquiring the whole continuous spectrum of each point of the scene. A powerful approach to this aim is to combine classical imaging with Fourier-transform spectrometry [1].

Hyperspectral imaging in the Thermal infrared of a sample with mineral and artificial quartz. Left: False RGB image, synthesized from the spectral data; Right: spectral emissivity.

In this talk, I will describe the main properties of the spectral imaging and the current acquisition approaches. I will also show the most recent advancements obtained at the Istituto di Fotonica e Nanotecnologie (IFN-CNR), based on an innovative optical device [2].

Our compact hyperspectral system is able to acquire spectral reflectance and fluorescence images with high sensitivity, broad spectral coverage and high spectral resolution. Examples of hyperspectral remote-sensing and microscopy images will be provided and discussed [3].

Hyperspectral microscope fluorescence imaging of Invitrogen slide #1 (MitoTracker® Red CMXRos +Alexa Fluor® 488 phalloidin). Excitation: 2 lasers at 478 and 562 nm; Objective: 20X, 0.45 NA. (a) Fluorescence of Filamentous F-actin at 470-550nm; (b) Fluorescence of mitocondria at 570-680 nm; (c) Merged maps.

References

[1] S.P. Davis, M.C. Abrams, and J.W. Brault, Fourier Transform Spectrometry (Academic Press, 2001)
[2] D. Brida, C. Manzoni, and G. Cerullo, “Phase-locked pulses for two-dimensional spectroscopy by a birefringent delay line,” Opt. Lett. 37, 3027-3029 (2012)
[3] A. Perri, B. E. Nogueira de Faria, D. C. Teles Ferreira, D. Comelli, G. Valentini, F. Preda, D. Polli, A. M. de Paula, G. Cerullo, and C. Manzoni, “Hyperspectral imaging with a TWINS birefringent interferometer,” Opt. Express 27, 15956-15967 (2019)

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Date:
September 27
Time:
10:00 - 11:00
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ReMade@ARI