Photon efficient orientation estimation using polarization modulation in single-molecule localization microscopy

Journal Article (2022)
Authors

R. O. Thorsen (ImPhys/Computational Imaging)

C. N. Hulleman (ImPhys/Computational Imaging)

B. Rieger (ImPhys/Computational Imaging)

S Stallinga (TU Delft - ImPhys/Imaging Physics)

Research Group
ImPhys/Computational Imaging
Copyright
© 2022 R.Ø. Thorsen, C.N. Hulleman, B. Rieger, S. Stallinga
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.452159
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 R.Ø. Thorsen, C.N. Hulleman, B. Rieger, S. Stallinga
Research Group
ImPhys/Computational Imaging
Issue number
5
Volume number
13
Pages (from-to)
2835-2858
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.452159
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Abstract

Combining orientation estimation with localization microscopy opens up the possibility to analyze the underlying orientation of biomolecules on the nanometer scale. Inspired by the recent improvement of the localization precision by shifting excitation patterns (MINFLUX, SIMFLUX), we have adapted the idea towards the modulation of excitation polarization to enhance the orientation precision. For this modality two modes are analyzed: i) normally incident excitation with three polarization steps to retrieve the in-plane angle of emitters and ii) obliquely incident excitation with p-polarization with five different azimuthal angles of incidence to retrieve the full orientation. Firstly, we present a theoretical study of the lower precision limit with a Cramér-Rao bound for these modes. For the oblique incidence mode we find a favorable isotropic orientation precision for all molecular orientations if the polar angle of incidence is equal to arccos 2/3 ≈ 35 degrees. Secondly, a simulation study is performed to assess the performance for low signal-to-background ratios and how inaccurate illumination polarization angles affect the outcome. We show that a precision, at the Cramér-Rao bound (CRB) limit, of just 2.4 and 1.6 degrees in the azimuthal and polar angles can be achieved with only 1000 detected signal photons and 10 background photons per pixel (about twice better than reported earlier). Lastly, the alignment and calibration of an optical microscope with polarization control is described in detail. With this microscope a proof-of-principle experiment is carried out, demonstrating an experimental in-plane precision close to the CRB limit for signal photon counts ranging from 400 to 10,000.

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