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Guidestar-free image-guided wavefront shaping.

Tomer YeminyOri Katz
Published in: Science advances (2021)
Optical imaging through scattering media is a fundamental challenge in many applications. Recently, breakthroughs such as imaging through biological tissues and looking around corners have been obtained via wavefront-shaping approaches. However, these require an implanted guidestar for determining the wavefront correction, controlled coherent illumination, and most often raster scanning of the shaped focus. Alternative novel computational approaches that exploit speckle correlations avoid guidestars and wavefront control but are limited to small two-dimensional objects contained within the "memory-effect" correlation range. Here, we present a new concept, image-guided wavefront shaping, allowing widefield noninvasive, guidestar-free, incoherent imaging through highly scattering layers, without illumination control. The wavefront correction is found even for objects that are larger than the memory-effect range, by blindly optimizing image quality metrics. We demonstrate imaging of extended objects through highly scattering layers and multicore fibers, paving the way for noninvasive imaging in various applications, from microscopy to endoscopy.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • gene expression
  • magnetic resonance
  • high speed
  • mass spectrometry
  • optical coherence tomography
  • photodynamic therapy
  • single molecule
  • monte carlo
  • diffusion weighted imaging