Microscopes Borrow Tricks from Astronomy

Researchers are developing new microscope technologies to see deep within living tissues.

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$1 million grant from W. M. Keck Foundation funds Center for Adaptive Optical Microscopy at UC Santa Cruz

July 26, 2011
Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, are developing new microscope technologies to enable biologists to see deep within living tissues and observe critical processes involved in basic biology and disease.

Funded by a $1 million grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation, the new W. M. Keck Center for Adaptive Optical Microscopy at UC Santa Cruz builds on efforts begun in 2006 by a multidisciplinary group of biologists, astronomers, and optical engineers. Inspired by adaptive optics technology for telescopes, which has allowed astronomers to see more clearly and deeply into space, the researchers are developing adaptive optics for microscopes to enable deep imaging of living cells and tissues.

Principal investigator Joel Kubby, an associate professor of electrical engineering in the Baskin School of Engineering at UCSC, has worked on adaptive optics (AO) systems for large telescopes as well as for biological imaging. In astronomy, AO systems correct the blurring of telescope images caused by turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. In microscopy, blurring is caused by the flowing cytoplasm of living cells.

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