2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session D19: Focus Session: New Frontiers in Imaging III
2:30 PM–4:54 PM,
Monday, March 5, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: 104
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: Mark Conradi, Washington University in St. Louis
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.D19.1
Abstract: D19.00001 : Tissue Imaging and Multidimensional Spectroscopy Using Shaped Femtosecond Laser Pulses
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Warren Warren
(Duke University)
We use rapidly updatable, femtosecond pulse shaping and
multidimensional
spectroscopy to make new targets accessible by nonlinear optical
imaging.
For example, we observe two-photon absorption (TPA), sum frequency
absorption (SFA) and self phase modulation (SPM)). Detection of
TPA and
related effects, such as the local quantum yield
(fluorescence/absorption)
permits direct observation of important endogenous molecular
markers which
are invisible in multiphoton fluorescence microscopy; it also
permits
excitation in the long-wavelength water windows which have
significantly
reduced scattering, but little endogenous two-photon
fluorescence. The
fundamental problem is that at the powers one might reasonably
apply to
tissue (e.g. 5 mW from a modelocked laser) typically $10^{-6}$of
the light
is removed by TPA, with the rest lost to scattering and linear
absorption;
and SPM does not broaden the spectrum in the dramatic way
associated with
(for example) continuum generation.
A variety of solutions to these problems using femtosecond pulse
shaping
will be presented. The simplest solution, which uses amplitude
modulation of
a fs pulse train, has led to high quality microscopic images of
the melanin
distribution in melanotic lesions, and has led to discrimination
between the
different types of melanin in melanosomes. Shaping individual
pulses instead
of the envelope permits high sensitivity detection of both SPM
and TPA via
spectral hole refilling combined with heterodyne detection. We
manufacture
laser pulses with a narrow (ca. 3 nm) spectral hole, which can
only be
refilled by nonlinear processes; TPA causes refilling 180 degrees
out of
phase with the wings of the pulse, SPM is 90 degrees out of
phase. By
inserting a phase-coherent pedestal in the hole, then repeating the
experiment with a different phase on a timescale rapid compared
to any
physiological processes, we can extract the phase of the
refilling, hence
the relative contributions of SPM and TPA. This method can
extract excellent
signatures from hemoglobin as well as melanin. We have also used
it to image
neurons firing in tissue, and to characterize off-diagonal peaks
of contrast
agents in two-dimensional spectra.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.D19.1