Focusing on moving targets through scattering samples
Abstract
Focusing light through scattering media has been a longstanding goal of biomedical optics. While wavefront shaping and optical time-reversal techniques can in principle be used to focus light across scattering media, achieving this within a scattering medium with a noninvasive and efficient reference beacon, or guide star, remains an important challenge. Here, we show optical time-reversal focusing using a new technique termed Time Reversal by Analysis of Changing wavefronts from Kinetic targets (TRACK). By taking the difference between time-varying scattering fields caused by a moving object and applying optical time reversal, light can be focused back to the location previously occupied by the object. We demonstrate this approach with discretely moved objects as well as with particles in an aqueous flow, and obtain a focal peak-to-background strength of 204 in our demonstration experiments. We further demonstrate that the generated focus can be used to noninvasively count particles in a flow-cytometry configuration—even when the particles are hidden behind a strong diffuser. By achieving optical time reversal and focusing noninvasively without any external guide stars, using just the intrinsic characteristics of the sample, this work paves the way to a range of scattering media imaging applications, including underwater and atmospheric focusing as well as noninvasive in vivo flow cytometry.
Additional Information
© 2014 Optical Society of America. Received 21 July 2014; revised 12 August 2014; accepted 23 August 2014 (Doc. ID 217492); published 1 October 2014. Funding: GIST-Caltech (CG2012); NIH (1DP2OD007307-01); Wellcome Trust (WT092197). We thank Roarke Horstmeyer and Chen Xu for carefully reading our manuscript and providing helpful advice. B. J. was supported by a Sir Henry Wellcome postdoctoral fellowship.Attached Files
Published - optica-1-4-227.pdf
Supplemental Material - 227.MOV
Supplemental Material - optica-1-4-227__si.pdf
Files
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC4301445
- Eprint ID
- 57018
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20150427-132705735
- GIST-Caltech Research Collaboration
- CG2012
- NIH
- 1DP2OD007307-01
- Wellcome Trust
- WT092197
- Created
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2015-04-27Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field