Everything about Microscopy totally explained
Microscopy mi·cros·co·py (Pronunciation[mahy-kros-kuh-pee,mahy-kruh-skoh-pee]) is the technical field of using microscopes to view samples or objects. There are three well-known branches of microscopy,
optical,
electron and
scanning probe microscopy.
Optical and electron microscopy involve the
diffraction,
reflection, or
refraction of
electromagnetic radiation incident upon the subject of study, and the subsequent collection of this scattered radiation in order to build up an image. This process may be carried out by wide field irradiation of the sample (for example standard light microscopy and
transmission electron microscopy) or by scanning of a fine beam over the sample (for example
confocal microscopy and
scanning electron microscopy).
Scanning probe microscopy involves the interaction of a scanning probe with the surface or object of interest. The development of microscopy revolutionized
biology and remains an essential tool in that
science, along with many others.
Optical microscopy
Optical or light microscopy involves passing
visible light transmitted through or reflected from the sample through a single or multiple
lenses to allow a magnified view of the sample. The resulting image can be detected directly by the eye, imaged on a
photographic plate or
captured digitally. The single lens with its attachments, or the system of lenses and imaging equipment, along with the appropriate lighting equipment, sample stage and support, makes up the basic light microscope.
Limitations of optical microscopy
Limitations of standard optical microscopy (
bright field microscopy) lie in three areas;
- The technique can only image dark or strongly refracting objects effectively.
- Diffraction limits resolution to approximately 0.2 micrometre (see: microscope).
- Out of focus light from points outside the focal plane reduces image clarity.
Live cells in particular generally lack sufficient contrast to be studied successfully, internal structures of the cell are colourless and transparent. The most common way to increase contrast is to
stain the different structures with selective dyes, but this involves killing and fixing the sample. Staining may also introduce
artifacts, apparent structural details that are caused by the processing of the specimen and are thus not a legitimate feature of the specimen.
These limitations have, to some extent, all been overcome by specific microscopy techniques which can non-invasively increase the contrast of the image. In general, these techniques make use of differences in the refractive index of cell structures. It is comparable to looking through a glass window: you (bright field microscopy) don't see the glass but merely the dirt on the glass. There is however a difference as glass is a more dense material, and this creates a difference in phase of the light passing through. The human eye isn't sensitive to this difference in phase but clever optical solutions have been thought out to change this difference in phase into a difference in amplitude (light intensity).
Optical microscopy techniques
Bright field optical microscopy and what it means
Bright field microscopy is the simplest of all the light microscopy techniques. Sample illumination is via transmitted white light, for example illuminated from below and observed from above. Limitations include low
contrast of most biological samples and low apparent resolution due to the blur of out of focus material. The simplicity of the technique and the minimal sample preparation required are significant advantages.
Oblique illumination and what it means
The use of
oblique (from the side) illumination gives the image a 3-dimensional appearance and can highlight otherwise invisible features. A more recent technique based on this method is
Hoffmann's modulation contrast, a system found on inverted microscopes for use in cell culture. Oblique illumination suffers from the same limitations as bright field microscopy (low contrast of many biological samples; low apparent resolution due to out of focus objects), but may highlight otherwise invisible structures.
Dark field optical microscopy and what it means
Dark field microscopy is a technique for improving the contrast of unstained, transparent specimens. Darkfield illumination uses a carefully aligned light source to minimise the quantity of directly-transmitted (un-scattered) light entering the image plane, collecting only the light scattered by the sample. Darkfield can dramatically improve image contrast—especially of transparent objects—while requiring little equipment setup or sample preparation. However, the technique does suffer from low light intensity in final image of many biological samples, and continues to be affected by low apparent resolution.
Rheinberg illumination is a special variant of dark field illumination in which transparent, colored filters are inserted just before the
condenser so that light rays at high aperture are differently colored than those at low aperture (for example the background to the specimen may be blue while the object appears self-luminous yellow). Other color combinations are possible but their effectiveness is quite variable.
Phase contrast optical microscopy
» In electron microscopy: Phase-contrast imaging
More sophisticated techniques will show differences in optical density in proportion.
Phase contrast is a widely used technique that shows differences in refractive index as difference in contrast. It was developed by the Dutch physicist
Frits Zernike in the 1930s (for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1953). The nucleus in a cell for example will show up darkly against the surrounding cytoplasm. Contrast is excellent; however it isn't for use with thick objects. Frequently, a halo is formed even around small objects, which obscures detail. The system consists of a circular annulus in the condenser which produces a cone of light. This cone is superimposed on a similar sized ring within the phase-objective. Every objective has a different size ring, so for every objective another condenser setting has to be chosen. The ring in the objective has special optical properties: it first of all reduces the direct light in intensity, but more importantly, it creates an artificial phase difference of about a quarter wavelength. As the physical properties of this direct light have changed, interference with the diffracted light occurs, resulting in the phase contrast image.
Differential interference contrast microscopy
Superior and much more expensive is the use of
interference contrast. Differences in optical density will show up as differences in relief. A nucleus within a cell will actually show up as a globule in the most often used
differential interference contrast system according to
Georges Nomarski. However, it has to be kept in mind that this is an
optical effect, and the relief doesn't necessarily resemble the true shape!
Contrast is very good and the condenser aperture can be used fully open, thereby reducing the depth of field and maximizing resolution.
The system consists of a special prism (
Nomarski prism,
Wollaston prism) in the condenser that splits light in an ordinary and an extraordinary beam. The spatial difference between the two beams is minimal (less than the maximum resolution of the objective). After passage through the specimen, the beams are reunited by a similar prism in the objective.
In a homogeneous specimen, there's no difference between the two beams, and no contrast is being generated. However, near a refractive boundary (say a nucleus within the cytoplasm), the difference between the ordinary and the extraordinary beam will generate a relief in the image. Differential interference contrast requires a
polarized light source to function; two polarizing filters have to be fitted in the light path, one below the condenser (the polarizer), and the other above the objective (the analyzer).
Note: In cases where the optical design of a microscope produces an appreciable lateral separation of the two beams we've the case of
classical interference microscopy, which doesn't result in relief images, but can nevertheless be used for the quantitative determination of mass-thicknesses of microscopic objects.
Fluorescence microscopy
When certain compounds are illuminated with high energy light, they then emit light of a different, lower frequency. This effect is known as
fluorescence. Often specimens show their own characteristic
autofluorescence image, based on their chemical makeup.
This method is of critical importance in the modern life sciences, as it can be extremely sensitive, allowing the detection of single molecules. Many different fluorescent
dyes can be used to stain different structures or chemical compounds. One particularly powerful method is the combination of
antibodies coupled to a fluorochrome as in
immunostaining. Examples of commonly used fluorochromes are
fluorescein or
rhodamine.
The antibodies can be made tailored specifically for a chemical compound. For example, one strategy often in use is the artificial production of proteins, based on the genetic code (DNA). These proteins can then be used to immunize rabbits, which then form antibodies which bind to the protein. The antibodies are then coupled chemically to a fluorochrome and then used to trace the proteins in the cells under study.
Highly-efficient fluorescent
proteins such as the
green fluorescent protein (GFP) have been developed using the
molecular biology technique of
gene fusion, a process which links the
expression of the fluorescent compound to that of the target protein. This combined fluorescent protein is generally non-toxic to the organism and rarely interferes with the function of the protein under study. Genetically modified cells or organisms directly express the fluorescently-tagged proteins, which enables the study of the function of the original protein
in vivo.
Since
fluorescence emission differs in
wavelength (color) from the excitation light, a fluorescent image ideally only shows the structure of interest that was labelled with the fluorescent dye. This high specificity led to the widespread use of fluorescence light microscopy in biomedical research. Different fluorescent dyes can be used to stain different biological structures, which can then be detected simultaneously, while still being specific due to the individual color of the dye.
To block the excitation light from reaching the observer or the detector,
filter sets of high quality are needed. These typically consist of an
excitation filter selecting the range of excitation
wavelengths, a
dichroic mirror, and an
emission filter blocking the excitation light. Most fluorescence
microscopes are operated in the Epi-illumination mode (illumination and detection from one side of the sample) to further decrease the amount of excitation light entering the detector.
See also
total internal reflection fluorescence microscope.
Confocal laser scanning microscopy
Generates the image by a completely different way than the normal visual bright field microscope. It gives slightly higher resolution, but most importantly it provides optical sectioning without disturbing out-of-focus light degrading the image. Therefore it provides sharper images of 3D objects. This is often used in conjunction with
fluorescence microscopy.
Deconvolution microscopy
Fluorescence microscopy is extremely powerful due to its ability to show specifically labelled structures within a complex environment but also because of its inherent ability to provide three dimensional information of biological structures.
Unfortunately this information is blurred by the fact, that upon illumination all fluorescently labeled structures emit light no matter if they're in focus or not. This means, that an image of a certain structure is always blurred by the contribution of light from structures which are out of focus. This phenomenon becomes apparent as a loss of contrast especially when using objectives with a high resolving power, typically oil immersion objectives with a high numerical aperture.
Fortunately though, this phenomenon isn't caused by random processes such as light scattering but can be relatively well defined by the optical properties of the image formation in the microscope imaging system. If one considers a small fluorescent light source (essentially a bright spot), light coming from this spot spreads out the further out of focus one is. Under ideal conditions this produces a sort of "hourglass" shape of this
point source in the third (axial) dimension. This shape is called the
point spread function (PSF) of the microscope imaging system. Since any fluorescence image is made up of a large number of such small fluorescent light sources the image is said to be "convolved by the point spread function".
Knowing this point spread function means, that it's possible to reverse this process to a certain extent by computer based methods commonly known as
deconvolution microscopy. There are various algorithms available for 2D or 3D Deconvolution. They can be roughly classified in
non restorative and
restorative methods. While the non restorative methods can improve contrast by removing out of focus light from focal planes, only the restorative methods can actually reassign light to it proper place of origin. This can be an advantage over other types of 3D microscopy such as confocal microscopy, because light isn't thrown away but reused. For 3D deconvolution one typically provides a series of images derived from different focal planes (called a Z-stack) plus the knowledge of the PSF which can be either derived experimentally or theoretically from knowing all contributing parameters of the microscope.
Sub-diffraction optical microscopy techniques
It is well known that there's a spatial limit to which light can focus:
approximately half of the wavelength of the light you're using. But this isn't a true barrier, because this diffraction limit is only true in the far-field and localization precision can be increased with many photons and careful analysis (although two objects still can't be resolved); and like the
sound barrier, the diffraction barrier is breakable. This section explores some approaches to imaging objects smaller than ~250 nm. Most of the following information was gathered (with permission) from a chemistry blog's review of sub-diffraction microscopy techniques
Part I
and
Part II
. For a review, see also reference .
NSOM
Probably the most conceptual way to break the diffraction barrier is to use a light source and/or a detector that's itself nanometer in scale. Diffraction as we know it's truly a far-field effect: the light from an aperture is the
Fourier transform of the aperture in the far-field. But in the near-field, all of this isn't necessarily the case. Near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM) forces light through the tiny tip of a pulled fiber—and the aperture can be on the order of tens of nanometers. When the tip is brought to nanometers away from a molecule, the resolution isn't limited by diffraction but by the size of the tip aperture (because only that one molecule will see the light coming out of the tip). An image can be built by a
raster scan of the tip over the surface to create an image.
The main down-side to NSOM is the limited number of photons you can force out a tiny tip, and the minuscule collection efficiency (if you're trying to collect fluorescence in the near-field). Other techniques such as ANSOM (see below) try to avoid this drawback.
Local enhancement / ANSOM / bowties
Instead of forcing photons down a tiny tip, some techniques create a local bright spot in an otherwise diffraction-limited spot. ANSOM is apertureless NSOM: it uses a tip very close to a fluorophore to enhance the local electric field the fluorophore sees. Basically, the ANSOM tip is like a lightning rod which creates a hot spot of light.
Bowtie nanoantennas have been used to greatly and reproducibly enhance the electric field in the nanometer gap between the tips two gold triangles. Again, the point is to enhance a very small region of a diffraction-limited spot, thus improving the mismatch between light and nanoscale objects—and breaking the diffraction barrier.
STED
A recent favorite is
STED
—stimulated emission depletion. Stefan Hell at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry - Goettingen (Germany) developed this method, which uses two laser pulses. The first pulse is a diffraction-limited spot that's tuned to the absorption wavelength, so excites any fluorophores in that region; an immediate second pulse is red-shifted to the emission wavelength and stimulates emission back to the ground state before, thus depleting the excited state of any fluorophores in this depletion pulse. The trick is that the depletion pulse goes through a phase modulator that makes the pulse illuminate the sample in the shape of a donut,
so the outer part of the diffraction limited spot is depleted and the small center can still fluoresce. By saturating the depletion pulse, the center of the donut gets smaller and smaller until they can get resolution of tens of nanometers.
This technique also requires a
raster scan like NSOM and standard
confocal laser scanning microscopy.
Fitting the PSF
The methods above (and below) use experimental techniques to circumvent the diffraction barrier, but one can also use crafty analysis to increase the ability to know where a nanoscale object is located. The image of a point source on a
charge-coupled device camera is called a
point-spread function (PSF), which is limited by diffraction to be no less than approximately half the wavelength of the light. But it's possible to simply fit that PSF with a
Gaussian to locate the center of the PSF—and thus the location of the fluorophore. The precision by which this technique can locate the center depends on the number of photons collected (as well as the CCD pixel size and other factors). Regardless, groups like the
Selvin lab
and many others have employed this analysis to localize single fluorophores to a few nanometers. This, of course, requires careful measurements and collecting
many photons.
PALM & STORM
What fitting a PSF is to localization, photo-activated localization microscopy (PALM) is to "resolution"—this term is here used loosely to mean measuring the distance between objects, not true
optical resolution.
Eric Betzig
and colleagues developed PALM;
Xiaowei Zhuang
at Harvard used a similar techniques and calls it STORM: stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy. The basic premise of both techniques is to fill the imaging area with many dark fluorophores that can be photoactivated into a fluorescing state by a flash of light. Because photoactivation is
stochastic, only a few, well separated molecules "turn on." Then Gaussians are fit to their PSFs to high precision (
see section above
). After the few bright dots photobleach, another flash of the photoactivating light activates random fluorophores again and the PSFs are fit of these different well spaced objects. This process is repeated many times, building up an image molecule-by-molecule; and because the molecules were localized at different times, the "resolution" of the final image can be much higher than that limited by diffraction.
The major problem with these techniques is that to get these beautiful pictures, it takes on the order of hours to collect the data. This is certainly not the technique to study dynamics (fitting the PSF is better for that).
Structured illumination
There is also the wide-field structured-illumination (SI) approach to breaking the diffraction limit of light. SI—or patterned illumination—relies on both specific microscopy protocols and extensive software analysis post-exposure. But, because SI is a wide-field technique, it's usually able to capture images at a higher rate than confocal-based schemes like
STED. (This is only a generalization, because SI isn't actually super fast. I'm sure someone could make STED fast and SI slow!) The main concept of SI is to illuminate a sample with patterned light and increase the resolution by measuring the fringes in the
Moiré pattern (from the interference of the illumination pattern and the sample). "Otherwise-unobservable sample information can be deduced from the fringes and computationally restored."
SI enhances spatial resolution by collecting information from frequency space outside the observable region. This process is done in reciprocal space: the
Fourier transform (FT) of an SI image contains superimposed additional information from different areas of reciprocal space; with several frames with the illumination shifted by some phase, it's possible to computationally separate and reconstruct the FT image, which has much more resolution information. The reverse FT returns the reconstructed image to a super-resolution image.
But this only enhances the resolution by a factor of 2 (because the SI pattern can't be focused to anything smaller than half the wavelength of the excitation light). To further increase the resolution, you can introduce
nonlinearities, which show up as higher-order harmonics in the FT. In reference . Such a device could provide the resolution at nanometer scale and be absolutely non-destructive, but it isn't developed so well as optical microscope or an
electron microscope.
Scanning probe microscopy
This is a sub-diffraction technique. Examples of scanning probe microscopes are the
atomic force microscope (AFM), the
Scanning tunneling microscope and the
photonic force microscope. All such methods imply a solid probe tip in the vicinity (
near field) of an object, which is supposed to be almost flat. For more detail, see
Scanning probe microscopy.
Ultrasonic force microscopy
Ultrasonic Force Microscopy (UFM) has been developed in order to improve the details and image contrast on "flat" areas of interest where the AFM images are limited in contrast. The combination of AFM-UFM allows a near field acoustic microscopic image to be generated. The AFM tip is used to detect the ultrasonic waves and overcomes the limitation of wavelength that occurs in acoustic microscopy. By using the elastic changes under the AFM tip, an image of much greater detail than the AFM topography can be generated.
Ultrasonic force microscopy allows the local mapping of elasticity in atomic force microscopy by the application of ultrasonic vibration to the cantilever or sample. In an attempt to analyse the results of ultrasonic force microscopy in a quantitative fashion, a force-distance curve measurement is done with ultrasonic vibration applied to the cantilever base, and the results are compared with a model of the cantilever dynamics and tip-sample interaction based on the finite-difference technique.
Infrared microscopy
The term
infrared microscope covers two main types of diffraction-limited microscopy. The first provides optical visualisation plus IR spectroscopic data collection. The second (more recent and more advanced) technique employs
focal plane array detection for infrared
chemical imaging, where the image contrast is determined by the response of individual sample regions to particular IR wavelengths selected by the user.
IR versions of sub-diffraction microscopy (see above) exist also. These include IR NSOM and
photothermal microspectroscopy.
Amateur Microscopy
Amateur Microscopy is the investigation and observation of
biological and non-biological specimens for recreational purposes using an
optical microscope (light microscopes). Collectors of
minerals,
insects,
seashells and
plants may use
microscopes as tools to uncover features that help them
classify their collected items. Other amateurs may be interested in observing the life found in pond water and of other samples. Microscopes may also prove useful for the water quality assessment for people that keep a
home aquarium. Photographic documentation and drawing of the microscopic images are additional tasks that augment the spectrum of tasks of the amateur. There are even competitions for
photomicrograph art. Participants of this pastime may either use commercially prepared microscopic slides or may engage in the task of specimen preparation.
While
microscopy is a central tool in the documentation of biological specimens, it's rarely sufficient to justify the discovery of a new species based on microscopic investigations alone. Often genetic and biochemical tests are necessary to confirm the discovery of a new species. A fully equipped
laboratory may be necessary, something often not available to amateurs. For this reason it may be unlikely that amateur microscopists are capable of substantiating their find to the extent to yield a scientific publication.
In the late 1800's amateur microscopy became a popular hobby in the United States and Europe. Professor
John Phin published "Practical Hints on the Selection and Use of the Microscope (Second Edition, 1878)," and was also the editor of the “American Journal of Microscopy.”
Further Information
Get more info on 'Microscopy'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://microscopy.totallyexplained.com">Microscopy Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |