Light field microscopy Marc Levoy, Ren Ng, Andrew Adams Matthew Footer, Mark Horowitz Stanford Computer Graphics Laboratory.

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Light field microscopy

Marc Levoy, Ren Ng, Andrew Adams

Matthew Footer, Mark Horowitz

Stanford ComputerGraphics Laboratory

Marc Levoy

Executive summary

• captures the 4D light field inside a microscope

• yields perspective flyarounds and focal stacks from a single snapshot, but at lower spatial resolution

• focal stack → deconvolution microscopy → volume data

Marc Levoy

Devices for recording light fields

smallscenes

bigscenes

• handheld camera [Buehler 2001]

• camera gantry [Stanford 2002]

• array of cameras [Wilburn 2005]

• plenoptic camera [Ng 2005]

• light field microscope (this paper)

(using geometrical optics)

Marc Levoy

Light fields at micron scales

• wave optics must be considered– diffraction limits the spatial × angular resolution

• most objects are no longer opaque– each pixel is a line integral through the object

» of attenuation

» or emission

– can reconstruct 3D structure from these integrals» tomography

» 3D deconvolution

Marc Levoy

Conventional versus plenoptic camera

Marc Levoy

Conventional versus plenoptic camera

uv-plane st-plane

square-sided microlenses

125μ

Marc Levoy

Digital refocusing

• refocusing = summing windows extracted from several microlenses

Σ

Σ

Marc Levoy

Example of digital refocusing

Marc Levoy

Refocusing portraits

Marc Levoy

Macrophotography

Marc Levoy

Digitally moving the observer

• moving the observer = moving the window we extract from the microlenses

Σ

Σ

Marc Levoy

Example of moving the observer

Marc Levoy

Moving backward and forward

Marc Levoy

A light field microscope (LFM)

objective

specimen

intermediateimage plane

eyepiece

Marc Levoy

A light field microscope (LFM)

• 40x / 0.95NA objective

0.26μ spot on specimen× 40x = 10.4μ on sensor

2400 spots over 25mm field

• 1252-micron microlenses

200 × 200 microlenses with12 × 12 spots per microlens

objective

specimen

intermediateimage plane

eyepiecesensor

→ reduced lateral resolution on specimen= 0.26μ × 12 spots = 3.1μ

Marc Levoy

A light field microscope (LFM)

sensor

160mm

2.5mm

0.2mm

Marc Levoy

Example light field micrograph

• orange fluorescent crayon

• mercury-arc source + blue dichroic filter

• 16x / 0.5NA (dry) objective

• f/20 microlens array

• 65mm f/2.8 macro lens at 1:1

• Canon 20D digital camera

ordinary microscope light field microscope

200μ

Marc Levoy

The geometry of the light fieldin a microscope

• microscopes make orthographic views

• translating the stage in X or Y provides no parallax on the specimen

• out-of-plane features don’t shift position when they come into focus

f

objective lensesare telecentric

Marc Levoy

Panning and focusing

panning sequence focal stack

Marc Levoy

Mouse embryo lung(16x / 0.5NA water immersion)

light fieldpan focal stack

200μ

Marc Levoy

Axial resolution(a.k.a. depth of field)

• wave term + geometrical optics term

• ordinary microscope (16x/0.4NA (dry), e = 0)

• with microlens array (e = 125μ)

• stopped down to one pixel per microlens

eNAM

n

NA

nλDOFtot

2

3.34.0

1535.02

8.225.193.31254.016

1

4.0

1535.02

237spots125.193.3

→ number of slicesin focal stack

= 12

(geometrical optics dominates)

(wave optics dominates)

Marc Levoy

3D reconstruction

• confocal scanning [Minsky 1957]

• shape-from-focus [Nayar 1990]

• deconvolution microscopy [Agard 1984]

– 4D light field → digital refocusing →3D focal stack → deconvolution microscopy →3D volume data

(UMIC SUNY/Stonybrook) (Noguchi) (DeltaVision)

Marc Levoy

3D deconvolution

• object * PSF → focus stack {object} × {PSF} → {focus stack} {focus stack} {PSF} → {object}

• spectrum contains zeros, due to missing rays

• imaging noise is amplified by division by ~zeros

• reduce by regularization, e.g. smoothing

focus stack of a point in 3-space is the 3D PSF of that imaging system

[McNally 1999]

{PSF}

Marc Levoy

Silkworm mouth(40x / 1.3NA oil immersion)

slice of focal stack slice of volume volume rendering

100μ

Marc Levoy

Insect legs(16x / 0.4NA dry)

volume rendering all-focus image[Agarwala 2004]

200μ

Marc Levoy

3D reconstruction (revisited)

• 4D light field → digital refocusing →3D focal stack → deconvolution microscopy →3D volume data

• 4D light field → tomographic reconstruction →3D volume data

(from Kak & Slaney)

(DeltaVision)

Marc Levoy

Implications of this equivalence

• light fields of minimally scattering volumes contain only 3D worth of information, not 4D

• the extra dimension serves to reduce noise, but could be re-purposed?

OpticalProjectionTomography[Sharpe 2002]

Marc Levoy

Conclusions

• captures 3D structure of microscopic objects in a single snapshot, and at a single instant in time

Calcium fluorescent imagingof zebrafish larvae optic tectumduring changing visual stimula

Marc Levoy

Conclusions

• captures 3D structure of microscopic objects in a single snapshot, and at a single instant in time

but...

• sacrifices spatial resolution to obtain control over viewpoint and focus

• 3D reconstruction fails if specimen is too thick or too opaque

Marc Levoy

Future work

• extending the field of view by correcting digitally for objective aberrations

Nikon 40x 0.95NA (dry) Plan-Apo

Marc Levoy

Future work

• extending the field of view by correcting digitally for objective aberrations

• microlenses in the illumination path→ an imaging microscope scatterometer

200μ

angular dependenceof reflection fromsingle squid iridophore

Marc Levoyhttp://graphics.stanford.edu/projects/lfmicroscope

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