LED array microscopy is an emerging platform for computational imaging . Existing LED array systems often exploit transmission imaging geometries of standard brightfield microscopes that leave the rich backscattered field undetected. Here, we develop an LED array reflectance microscope capturing the sample’s backscattered signal. In particular, we demonstrate multimodal brightfield, darkfield, and differential phase contrast imaging on fixed and living biological specimens including Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans), zebrafish embryos, and live cell cultures. Video-rate multimodal imaging records real-time features of freely-moving C. elegans and the fast beating heart of zebrafish embryo. Our new reflectance mode is a valuable addition to the LED array microscopic toolbox.
Most reports on oblique plane microscopy (OPM) have a limited microscopic field of view (FOV), typically within 1x1 mm2. We implemented an optical design of mesoscopic scanning oblique plane microscopy (OPM) to allow using low numerical aperture (NA) objective lens. The angle of the intermediate image before the remote focusing system was increased by a demagnification under Scheimpflug condition such that the light collecting efficiency in the remote focusing system was significantly improved. We demonstrate a mesoscopic FOV up to ~6× 5×0.6 mm3 volumetric imaging, the largest reported FOV by OPM so far.
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