Extracting hidden information from your fluorescence microscope

Mikael P. Backlund (Hosted by Murch), Harvard University, Department of Physics,Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Fluorescence microscopy is a workhorse technique in both biological and abiological imaging and sensing. A fluorescence photon can carry information encoded in its position, momentum, polarization, phase, spectrum, and timing, but off-the-shelf microscopes are poor conduits of most of this information. As a consequence, efficiently extracting information from the specimen often requires redesign of the microscopy experiment in a way that leverages some additional physical know-how. Here I will focus on two studies that demonstrate this concept. First I will discuss the fundamental limits associated with determining the three-dimensional position of a fluorescent emitter, with insights provided by quantum parameter estimation theory. Second, I will show how nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond can be used to convey three-dimensional magnetic field information from the sample to the microscope. These and related approaches push the limits of what can be measured with a fluorescence microscope, offering exciting new possibilities for the molecular sciences.