Owing to its capacity for unique (bio)-chemical specificity, microscopy with mid–infrared (IR) illumination holds tremendous promise for a wide range of biomedical and industrial applications. The primary limitation, however, remains detection, with current mid-IR detection technology often marrying inferior technical capabilities with prohibitive costs. Here, we experimentally show how nonlinear interferometry with entangled light can provide a powerful tool for mid-IR microscopy while only requiring near-IR detection with a silicon-based camera. In this proof-of-principle implementation, we demonstrate widefield imaging over a broad wavelength range covering 3.4 to 4.3 μm and demonstrate a spatial resolution of 35 μm for images containing 650 resolved elements. Moreover, we demonstrate that our technique is suitable for acquiring microscopic images of biological tissue samples in the mid-IR. These results form a fresh perspective for potential relevance of quantum imaging techniques in the life sciences.
CITATION STYLE
Kviatkovsky, I., Chrzanowski, H. M., Avery, E. G., Bartolomaeus, H., & Ramelow, S. (2020). Microscopy with undetected photons in the mid-infrared. Science Advances, 6(42). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abd0264
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