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Item The Effects of Refractive Index Mismatch on Multiphoton Fluorescence Excitation Microscopy of Biological Tissue(2010-08-31T18:42:10Z) Young, Pamela Anne; Rubart, Michael; Decca, Ricardo S.; Bacallao, Robert L.; Dunn, Kenneth WilliamIntroduction: Multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy (MPM) is an invaluable tool for studying processes in tissue in live animals by enabling biologists to view tissues up to hundreds of microns in depth. Unfortunately, imaging depth in MPM is limited to less than a millimeter in tissue due to spherical aberration, light scattering, and light absorption. Spherical aberration is caused by refractive index mismatch between the objective immersion medium and sample. Refractive index heterogeneities within the sample cause light scattering. We investigate the effects of refractive index mismatch on imaging depth in MPM. Methods: The effects of spherical aberration on signal attenuation and resolution degradation with depth are characterized with minimal light absorption and scattering using sub-resolution microspheres mounted in test sample of agarose with varied refractive index. The effects of light scattering on signal attenuation and resolution degradation with depth are characterized using sub-resolution microspheres in kidney tissue samples mounted in optical clearing media to alter the refractive index heterogeneities within the tissue. Results: The studies demonstrate that signal levels and axial resolution both rapidly decline with depth into refractive index mismatched samples. Interestingly, studies of optical clearing with a water immersion objective show that reducing scattering increases reach even when it increases refractive index mismatch degrading axial resolution. Scattering, in the absence of spherical aberration, does not degrade axial resolution. The largest improvements in imaging depth are obtained when both scattering and refractive index mismatch are reduced. Conclusions: Spherical aberration, caused by refractive index mismatch between the immersion media and sample, and scattering, caused by refractive index heterogeneity within the sample, both cause signal to rapidly attenuate with depth in MPM. Scattering, however, seems to be the predominant cause of signal attenuation with depth in kidney tissue. Kenneth W. Dunn, Ph.D., ChairItem Near-Field Investigations of the Anisotropic Properties of Supported Lipid Bilayers(2012-07-24) Johnson, Merrell A.; Decca, Ricardo; Rader, Andrew J.; Ritchie, Ken; Petrache, Horia; Wassall, StephenThe details of Polarization Modulation Near-Field Scanning Optical Microscopy (PM-NSOM) are presented. How to properly calibrate and align the system is also introduced. A measurement of Muscovite crystal is used to display the capabilities of the setup. Measurements of supported Lβʹ 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DPPC) lipid bilayers are presented, emphasizing how it was tooled in exploiting the anisotropic nature of the acyl chains. A discussion of how the effective retardance (ΔS = 2π( n_e-n_o )t/λ) and the direction of the projection of the acyl chains (θ) are measured simultaneously is given, (where t is the thickness of the bilayer and λ is the wavelength of light used). It is shown from ΔS the birefringence (ne-no) of the bilayer is determined, by assuming the acyl chain tilt with respect to the membrane's normal to be ϕ ≈ 32. Time varying experiments show lateral diffusions of ~ 2 x 10-12 cm2/s. Temperature controlled PM-NSOM is shown to be a viable way to determine the main phase transition temperature (Tm) for going from the gel Lβʹ to liquid disorder Lα state of supported DPPC bilayers. A change of ΔS ~ (3.8 +/- 0.3 mrad) at the main phase transition temperature Tm (≈41^o C) is observed. This agrees well with previous values of (ne-no) and translates to an assumed <ϕ> ~ 32^o when T < Tm and 0^o when T > Tm. Evidence of supper heating and supper cooling will be presented, along with a discussion of the fluctuations that occur around Tm. Finally it is shown how physical parameters such as the polarizability are extracted from the data. Values of the transverse (αt) and longitudinal (αl) polarizabilites of the acyl chains are shown to be, αt = 44.2 Å3 and αl = 94.4 Å3, which correspond well with the theoretical values of a single palmitic acid (C16) αt = 25.14 Å3 and αl = 45.8 Å3.Item Passive parity-time-symmetry-breaking transitions without exceptional points in dissipative photonic systems(OSA, 2018-08-01) Joglekar, Yogesh N.; Harter, Andrew K.; Physics, School of ScienceOver the past decade, parity-time (PT)-symmetric Hamiltonians have been experimentally realized in classical, optical settings with balanced gain and loss, or in quantum systems with localized loss. In both realizations, the PT-symmetry-breaking transition occurs at the exceptional point of the non-Hermitian Hamiltonian, where its eigenvalues and the corresponding eigenvectors both coincide. Here, we show that in lossy systems, the PT transition is a phenomenon that broadly occurs without an attendant exceptional point, and is driven by the potential asymmetry between the neutral and the lossy regions. With experimentally realizable quantum models in mind, we investigate dimer and trimer waveguide configurations with one lossy waveguide. We validate the tight-binding model results by using the beam-propagation-method analysis. Our results pave a robust way toward studying the interplay between passive PT transitions and quantum effects in dissipative photonic configurations.