Harnessing quantum light for microscopic biomechanical imaging of cells and tissues
Tian Li, Vsevolod Cheburkanov, Vladislav V. Yakovlev, Girish S., Agarwal, and Marlan O. Scully

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum-light-enhanced stimulated Brillouin scattering imaging technique that significantly reduces photo-damage in live biological samples, enabling longer, non-destructive biomechanical imaging at the cellular level.
Contribution
The study presents a novel quantum-light-based approach to improve SBS imaging contrast, increasing sample viability and extending imaging duration in live tissues.
Findings
Three-fold increase in sample viability with squeezed-light illumination
Significant enhancement in signal-to-noise ratio for SBS imaging
Extended imaging times without damaging live samples
Abstract
The biomechanical properties of cells and tissues play an important role in our fundamental understanding of the structures and functions of biological systems at both the cellular and subcellular levels. Recently, Brillouin microscopy, which offers a label-free spectroscopic means of assessing viscoelastic properties in vivo, has emerged as a powerful way to interrogate those properties on a microscopic level in living tissues. However, susceptibility to photo-damage and photo-bleaching, particularly when high-intensity laser beams are used to induce Brillouin scattering, poses a significant challenge. This article introduces a transformative approach designed to mitigate photo-damage in biological and biomedical studies, enabling non-destructive, label-free assessments of mechanical properties in live biological samples. By leveraging quantum-light-enhanced stimulated Brillouin…
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