Biological Microscopy with Undetected Photons
Andras Buzas, Elmar K. Wolff, Mihaly G. Benedict, Pal Ormos, Andras, Der

TL;DR
This paper introduces an improved quantum imaging technique using undetected photons, significantly enhancing resolution for biological microscopy and enabling new applications in observing tiny biological objects.
Contribution
The authors develop a modified ghost imaging method with seeding laser and confocal scanning, achieving over tenfold resolution improvement in biological microscopy.
Findings
Resolution improved by more than an order of magnitude.
Demonstrated application in biological sample microscopy.
Enhanced potential for non-invasive biological imaging.
Abstract
Novel imaging techniques utilizing nondegenerate, correlated photon pairs sparked intense interest during the last couple of years among scientists of the quantum optics community and beyond. It is a key property of such "ghost imaging" or "quantum interference" methods that they use those photons of the correlated pairs for imaging that never interacted with the sample, allowing detection in a spectral range different from that of the illumination of the object. Extensive applications of these techniques in spectroscopy and microscopy are envisioned, however, their limited spatial resolution to date has not yet supported real-life microscopic investigations of tiny biological objects. Here we report a modification of the method based on quantum interference by using a seeding laser and confocal scanning, that allows the improvement of the resolution of imaging with undetected photons…
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