Researchers from various universities are now viewing the mouse brain through the skull thanks to a new holographic microscope.
Light experiences repeated scattering in intricate structures like living tissue, which causesto erratically shift their direction several times as they pass through the tissue. A large portion of the image data carried by the light is damaged due to this process.
The study team was able to quantitatively analyze how light and matter interact, which allowed them to develop their earlier microscope further. A super-depth, three-dimensional time-resolved holographic microscope that enables deeper-than-ever tissue viewing was successfully developed, according to a recent study.
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