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Published byKaia Marquiss Modified over 9 years ago
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Biophotonics www.postech.edu/~hjcha/jelyfish.jpg
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Electromagnetism Its all described by Maxwell’s equations (a Scott, 1831-1879) (you need to know maths to do physics …)
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Total internal Reflection
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Demonstration Prism Total internal Reflection Snells law of refraction (contained in Maxwell’s Equations) medium : n medium : n
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Use in technology Optical fibres – all high speed telecommunication Light concentrators for solar cells Back-illumination for LCD TVs ~ - lightguides Demonstration glass plate & paint Demonstration fluorescent tube Demonstration water jet
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Use in sensing There is an evanescent wave close to the surface, which can be used for sensing of material close (<100nm) to the surface 100nm
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Whispering Gallery at St Pauls
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Whispering Gallery mode sensors Use total internal reflection and circular orbits Constructive interference condition gives discrete set of optical modes: resonances Resonance shift used for sensing Light orbit in microsphere by quasi-total internal reflection. n sphere >n medium frequency reflection Demonstration WGM, Resonance
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Use of Optical Biosensors Healthcare (Drug Development, Diagnosis) Defense (Detection of Explosives, chemical and biological weapons) Police (Forensics) Research (Protein interactions – the machinery of life) Sensitive detection of viruses,chemicals,bacteria, proteins etc.
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Fluorescent Proteins Genetic code (DNA) describes fluorescent proteins Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) extracted from Jellyfish, and incorporated into other organisms by “genetic engineering” A virus can add a code segment to your DNA 4 nanometer 10000 atoms 1/10000 of a hair DNA GFP
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GFP Variants Genetic code engineered for different colour http://www.conncoll.edu/ccacad/zimmer/GFP-ww/tsien.html Bacteria expressing different FPs
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Painting the Brain – The Brainbow NMR Tomography confocal two-photon microscopy 5cm 5mm 200 m photography
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Better transmission in the red (longer wavelength
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Two-Photon Microscopy Uses two photons, i.e. a light overtone. Needs high intensities excites only in the focus less scattering due to doubled wavelength a neuron in the brain imaged with two-photon flourescence
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Femtosecond Laser sources 1 fs = 10 -15 s 100fs pulses are only 30 m thick (This is the distance light is travelling in 100fs) t 10ns Power concentration P av = 1mW (like a laser pointer) P peak = 1mW × 10ns/100fs = 1mW × 10 5 = 100W!
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femtosecond laser A two-photon microscope
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How to see cell composition without paint Listen to the molecular vibration ! 92 THz47 THz 115 THz118 THz49 THz Sound slow-motion 1 Billion to one (1 second vibrations in 30 years audio) Water (H 2 O) Methane (CH 4 ) 95 THz41 THz Complex molecule
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Drive the vibration with light Green light has a frequency of 600THz, 10 times higher than molecular vibrations Use interference of two light waves to drive vibration by the difference in frequency 990+1000Hz (10Hz difference) 999+1000Hz (1 Hz difference) 990Hz1000Hz time field amplitude
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Finally: CARS Microscopy on Cells HepG2 (Human liver) living cells in a soft-agar 3D matrix Fat distribution in small droplets 50 mx50 mx20 m Human Hair on this scale Scanning Electron Microscopy Photography
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CARS on uni-lamellar vesicle (small soap bubble in water)
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Any Questions ?
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