[OpenSPIM] Lasers for SPIM
Krieger, Jan
j.krieger at Dkfz-Heidelberg.de
Fri Dec 20 15:57:47 CST 2013
Hi all!
tlking bout shutters ... there are several possibilities to build cheap laser shutters with different speed grades:
1. We use small servos controlled by an Arduino ... they are small, reliable and move a relatively long distance ... but they are slow
2. http://george.ph.utexas.edu/~meyrath/informal/shutter.pdf
3. ftp://ftp.artov.rm.cnr.it/incoming/ifa.rm.cnr.it/Maurizio.Viterbini/Public/chopper/RevSciInstrum_75_3077.pdf
4. http://www.instructables.com/id/DIY-Laser-Shutter/all/?lang=zh
5. This paper gives a good overview: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/rsi/82/4/10.1063/1.3574224
Best,
JAN
Dipl.-Phys. Jan Krieger
German Cancer Research Center (dkfz)
Department B040 - Biophysics of Macromolecules (Prof. J. Langowski)
Im Neuenheimer Feld 580
69120 Heidelberg
fon: +49 / 6221 / 42-3395
fax: +49 / 6221 / 42-3391
e-mail: j.krieger at dkfz.de
www: http://www.dkfz.de/Macromol/
________________________________________
Von: openspim-bounces at openspim.org [openspim-bounces at openspim.org] im Auftrag von Fredrik Ek [fredrik.ek at med.lu.se]
Gesendet: Freitag, 20. Dezember 2013 17:12
An: openspim at openspim.org
Betreff: Re: [OpenSPIM] Lasers for SPIM
Hi all,
Great inputs to my questions. Thanks a lot!
Have a nice Christmas holiday and a Happy New Year
Best,
Fredrik
Från: openspim-bounces at openspim.org [mailto:openspim-bounces at openspim.org] För Michael Weber
Skickat: den 20 december 2013 14:06
Till: openspim at openspim.org
Ämne: Re: [OpenSPIM] Lasers for SPIM
Hi Frederik,
here are my thoughts.
I agree that running DPSS lasers on low power is not ideal, they get unstable and the beam profile gets worse. But you can always install a neutral density filter in your illumination path, so that should not be an issue. Or you use an AOTF anyway. The laser power necessary for your experiment depends on a lot of factors: how the illumination path is set up, how sensitive your camera is, how bright your signal is and so on. Around 50 mW out of the laser/fiber per illumination side should typically be enough for normal imaging of fluorescent proteins in zebrafish with light sheet microscopy. But a bit more does never harm.
Fiber-coupling allows you to "quickly" swap lasers without complete realignment and increases beam quality, which is nice for diode lasers but typically not needed for DPSS or gas lasers. But you lose some power in the fiber. From my experience, open beam setups are more stable over time, whereas fiber couplers can drift over time or because of temperature changes.
Laser units are nice to have, you have everything in one box and can call the service if power drops or something does not work. Definitely nice for multi-user environment. On the other hand they are more expensive and might not have exactly the laser lines / powers you want.
I like AOTFs, they add a lot of comfort, are fast and reliable. But they do require precise alignment and add cost to the system. A cheap alternative are neutral density filters (e.g. in a filter wheel) plus shutters, although shutters are not as fast and wear out over time.
Good luck with your setup!
Michael
On Dec 19, 2013, at 10:23 PM, Fredrik Ek <fredrik.ek at med.lu.se<mailto:fredrik.ek at med.lu.se>> wrote:
Hi,
we are setting up a SPIM system based on the openspim configuration with some additional features (Orca Flash 4, 3 lasers and emission filter Wheel). We are in the process of purchasing lasers and I have some questions:
1. What is your opinion when it comes to the power of lasermodules. I noted that Jan Krieger in a recent mail pointed out the DPSS lasers could be flucturating once below 10% of their nominal power. We are going to use them for analysis of zebrafish larvae and what is a typical power setting for running these kind of experiments.
2. Fiberconnected or open beam. Your opinions.
3. Beamcombiners (light hub Sole or similar) or seperate lasers? Other than Jan that have similar experiences of problems with alignment.
4. AOTF module or not?
Your input is highly appreciated.
Thanks!
Fredrik Ek,
Researcher, Lund University Sweden
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Michael Weber
PhD Student, Huisken lab
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
Pfotenhauerstrasse 108, 01307 Dresden
Tel. 0049 351/2102837
http://www.mpi-cbg.de/huisken
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