STED Nanoscopy with Time-Gated Detection: Theoretical and Experimental Aspects

2013 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Vicidomini, Giuseppe, Andreas Schoenle, Haisen Ta, Kyu Young Han, Gael Moneron, Christian Eggeling, and Stefan Hell. "STED Nanoscopy with Time-Gated Detection: Theoretical and Experimental Aspects​." ​PLoS ONE ​8, no. 1 (2013): ​e54421​. ​https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0054421.

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Authors
Vicidomini, Giuseppe; Schoenle, Andreas ; Ta, Haisen ; Han, Kyu Young; Moneron, Gael ; Eggeling, Christian ; Hell, Stefan 
Abstract
In a stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscope the region in which fluorescence markers can emit spontaneously shrinks with continued STED beam action after a singular excitation event. This fact has been recently used to substantially improve the effective spatial resolution in STED nanoscopy using time-gated detection, pulsed excitation and continuous wave (CW) STED beams. We present a theoretical framework and experimental data that characterize the time evolution of the effective point-spread-function of a STED microscope and illustrate the physical basis, the benefits, and the limitations of time-gated detection both for CW and pulsed STED lasers. While gating hardly improves the effective resolution in the all-pulsed modality, in the CW-STED modality gating strongly suppresses low spatial frequencies in the image. Gated CW-STED nanoscopy is in essence limited (only) by the reduction of the signal that is associated with gating. Time-gated detection also reduces/suppresses the influence of local variations of the fluorescence lifetime on STED microscopy resolution.
Issue Date
2013
Journal
PLoS ONE 
ISSN
1932-6203
Language
English

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