Stereo Darkfield Interferometry : a versatile localization method for subnanometer force spectroscopy of single molecules and 3D-tracking of single cells
Martin Rieu, Thibault Vieille, Ga\"el Radou, Rapha\"el Jeanneret,, Nadia Ruiz, Bertrand Ducos, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Allemand, Vincent Croquette

TL;DR
Stereo Darkfield Interferometry (SDI) is a new optical method that achieves sub-nanometer 3D tracking of single molecules and cells with high precision, simplicity, and versatility, overcoming limitations of existing super-resolution techniques.
Contribution
The paper introduces SDI, a novel 3D tracking technique combining stereoscopy and interferometry for high-precision, versatile, and straightforward single-particle and cell tracking.
Findings
Achieves sub-nanometer frame-to-frame precision in 3D tracking.
Successfully measures 1 nm axial steps in single-molecule dynamics.
Enables 3D tracking of multiple single cells using standard objectives.
Abstract
Super-resolutive 3D tracking, such as PSF engineering or evanescent field imaging has long been used to track microparticles and to enhance the throughput of single molecules force spectroscopic measurements. However, current methods present two drawbacks. First, they lack precision compared with optical tweezers or AFM. Second, the dependence of their signal upon the position is complex creating the need for a time-consuming calibration step. Here, we introduce a new optical technique that circumvents both issues and allows for a simple, versatile and efficient 3D tracking of diluted particles while offering a sub-nanometer frame-to-frame precision in all three spatial directions. The principle is to combine stereoscopy and interferometry, such that the z (axial) position is measured through the distance between two interferometric fringe patterns. The linearity of this stereoscopy…
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