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Roadmap on Label-Free Super-Resolution Imaging.

Vasily N AstratovYair Ben SahelYonina C EldarLuzhe HuangAydogan OzcanNikolay ZheludevJunxiang ZhaoZachary BurnsZhaowei LiuEvgenii NarimanovNeha GoswamiGabriel PopescuEmanuel PfitznerPhilipp KukuraYi-Teng HsiaoChia-Lung HsiehBrian AbbeyAlberto DiasproAymeric LeGratietPaolo BianchiniNatan T ShakedBertrand SimonNicolas VerrierMatthieu DebailleulOlivier HaeberléSheng WangMengkun LiuYeran BaiJi-Xin ChengBehjat S KarimanKatsumasa FujitaMoshe SinvaniZeev ZalevskyXiangping LiGuan-Jie HuangShi-Wei ChuOmer TzangDror HershkovitzOri CheshnovskyMikko J HuttunenStefan G StanciuVera N SmolyaninovaIgor I SmolyaninovUlf LeonhardtSahar SahebdivanZengbo WangBoris Luk'yanchukLimin WuAlexey V MaslovBoya JinConstantin R SimovskiStephane PerrinPaul MontgomerySylvain Lecler
Published in: Laser & photonics reviews (2023)
Label-free super-resolution (LFSR) imaging relies on light-scattering processes in nanoscale objects without a need for fluorescent (FL) staining required in super-resolved FL microscopy. The objectives of this Roadmap are to present a comprehensive vision of the developments, the state-of-the-art in this field, and to discuss the resolution boundaries and hurdles which need to be overcome to break the classical diffraction limit of the LFSR imaging. The scope of this Roadmap spans from the advanced interference detection techniques, where the diffraction-limited lateral resolution is combined with unsurpassed axial and temporal resolution, to techniques with true lateral super-resolution capability which are based on understanding resolution as an information science problem, on using novel structured illumination, near-field scanning, and nonlinear optics approaches, and on designing superlenses based on nanoplasmonics, metamaterials, transformation optics, and microsphere-assisted approaches. To this end, this Roadmap brings under the same umbrella researchers from the physics and biomedical optics communities in which such studies have often been developing separately. The ultimate intent of this paper is to create a vision for the current and future developments of LFSR imaging based on its physical mechanisms and to create a great opening for the series of articles in this field.
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