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Dive into the research topics where Amanda J. Wright is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda J. Wright.


Optics Express | 2008

Measuring the accuracy of particle position and force in optical tweezers using high-speed video microscopy

Graham M. Gibson; Jonathan Leach; Stephen Keen; Amanda J. Wright; Miles J. Padgett

We assess the performance of a CMOS camera for the measurement of particle position within optical tweezers and the associated autocorrelation function and power spectrum. Measurement of the displacement of the particle from the trap center can also be related to the applied force. By considering the Allan variance of these measurements, we show that such cameras are capable of reaching the thermal limits of nanometer and femtonewton accuracies, and hence are suitable for many of the applications that traditionally use quadrant photodiodes. As an example of a multi-particle measurement we show the hydrodynamic coupling between two particles.


Optics Express | 2007

Optical ferris wheel for ultracold atoms

Sonja Franke-Arnold; Jonathan Leach; Miles J. Padgett; V. E. Lembessis; Demosthenes Ellinas; Amanda J. Wright; John M. Girkin; Patrik Ohberg; Aidan S. Arnold

We propose a versatile optical ring lattice suitable for trapping cold and quantum degenerate atomic samples. We demonstrate the realisation of intensity patterns from pairs of Laguerre-Gauss (exp(i??) modes with different ? indices. These patterns can be rotated by introducing a frequency shift between the modes. We can generate bright ring lattices for trapping atoms in red-detuned light, and dark ring lattices suitable for trapping atoms with minimal heating in the optical vortices of blue-detuned light. The lattice sites can be joined to form a uniform ring trap, making it ideal for studying persistent currents and the Mott insulator transition in a ring geometry.


Optics Express | 2007

Adaptive optics for enhanced signal in CARS microscopy.

Amanda J. Wright; S. Poland; John M. Girkin; Christian W. Freudiger; Conor L. Evans; Xiaoliang Sunney Xie

We report the use of adaptive optics with coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) microscopy for label-free deep tissue imaging based on molecular vibrational spectroscopy. The setup employs a deformable membrane mirror and a random search optimization algorithm to improve signal intensity and image quality at large sample depths. We demonstrate the ability to correct for both system and sample-induced aberrations in test samples as well as in muscle tissue in order to enhance the CARS signal. The combined system and sample-induced aberration correction increased the signal by an average factor of approximately 3x for the test samples at a depth of 700 microm and approximately 6x for muscle tissue at a depth of 260 microm. The enhanced signal and higher penetration depth offered by adaptive optics will augment CARS microscopy as an in vivo and in situ biomedical imaging modality.


Lab on a Chip | 2005

Creating permanent 3D arrangements of isolated cells using holographic optical tweezers

Pamela Jordan; Jonathan Leach; Miles J. Padgett; Paul E. Blackburn; Neil W. Isaacs; Mattias Goksör; Dag Hanstorp; Amanda J. Wright; John M. Girkin; Jonathan M. Cooper

We report the creation of permanent 3D configurations of cells, at predefined positions, within a gelatin matrix. The technique used holographic optical tweezers to manipulate individual E. coli within a solution comprising monomer precursors. The matrix was then set and after the laser beam was removed, we were able to demonstrate that the structures remained intact for many days. We were also able to demonstrate that, in the presence of appropriate nutrients, the E. coli survived within the gelatin matrix for several days. The technique could have a number of potential future applications, including the arrangement of a variety of different cell types in complex architectures, as motifs for promoting tissue differentiation and growth within the field of cell engineering.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2009

Adaptive optics for deeper imaging of biological samples.

John M. Girkin; S. Poland; Amanda J. Wright

Optical microscopy has been a cornerstone of life science investigations since its first practical application around 400 years ago with the goal being subcellular resolution, three-dimensional images, at depth, in living samples. Nonlinear microscopy brought this dream a step closer, but as one images more deeply the material through which you image can greatly distort the view. By using optical devices, originally developed for astronomy, whose optical properties can be changed in real time, active compensation for sample-induced aberrations is possible. Submicron resolution images are now routinely recorded from depths over 1mm into tissue. Such active optical elements can also be used to keep conventional microscopes, both confocal and widefield, in optimal alignment.


Optics Express | 2006

Generation of achromatic Bessel beams using a compensated spatial light modulator.

Jonathan Leach; Graham M. Gibson; Miles J. Padgett; Elric Esposito; Gail McConnell; Amanda J. Wright; John M. Girkin

We report the creation of white-light, achromatic Bessel beams using a spatial light modulator and a prism to compensate for the dispersion. Unlike the Bessel beam created by a refractive axicon, this achromatic beam has a radial wavevector and hence an intensity cross-section which is independent of wavelength. The technique also lends itself to the generation of higher order Bessel beams with an on-axis optical vortex and associated orbital angular momentum.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Parametric Resonance of Optically Trapped Aerosols

R. Di Leonardo; G. Ruocco; Jonathan Leach; Miles J. Padgett; Amanda J. Wright; John M. Girkin; Daniel R. Burnham; David McGloin

The Brownian dynamics of an optically trapped water droplet are investigated across the transition from over- to underdamped oscillations. The spectrum of position fluctuations evolves from a Lorentzian shape typical of overdamped systems (beads in liquid solvents) to a damped harmonic oscillator spectrum showing a resonance peak. In this later underdamped regime, we excite parametric resonance by periodically modulating the trapping power at twice the resonant frequency. The power spectra of position fluctuations are in excellent agreement with the obtained analytical solutions of a parametrically modulated Langevin equation.


Journal of Optics | 2010

An SLM-based Shack?Hartmann wavefront sensor for aberration correction in optical tweezers

Richard Bowman; Amanda J. Wright; Miles J. Padgett

Holographic optical tweezers allow the creation of multiple optical traps in 3D configurations through the use of dynamic diffractive optical elements called spatial light modulators (SLMs). We show that, in addition to controlling traps, the SLM in a holographic tweezers system can be both the principal element of a wavefront sensor and the corrective element in a closed-loop adaptive optics system. This means that aberrations in such systems can be estimated and corrected without altering the experimental setup. Aberrations are estimated using the Shack–Hartmann method, where an array of spots is projected into the sample plane and the distortion of this array is used to recover the aberration. The system can recover aberrations of up to ten wavelengths peak–peak, and is sensitive to aberrations much smaller than a wavelength. The spot pattern could also be analysed by eye, as a tool for aligning the system.


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Mechanisms of optical angular momentum transfer to nematic liquid crystalline droplets.

Tiffany Wood; Helen F. Gleeson; Mark Russell Dickinson; Amanda J. Wright

A detailed study is presented that evaluates the relative importance of wave plate behavior, scattering processes and absorption phenomena in transferring optical torque from circularly polarized light to optically trapped nematic droplets. A wide range of parameters is considered: droplet diameters between 1 and 15 μm, birefringence values from 0.15 to 0.26 and trapping beam powers from 50 mW to 400 mW. Wave plate behavior is verified through the dependence of torque on droplet diameter and material birefringence. The dependence of the magnitude of the torque on material birefringence confirms the additional importance of the scattering mechanism. Absorption processes are found to be negligible.


Optics Express | 2011

Impact of wavefront distortion and scattering on 2-photon microscopy in mammalian brain tissue.

Chaigneau E; Amanda J. Wright; S. Poland; John M. Girkin; Silver Ra

Two-photon (2P) microscopy is widely used in neuroscience, but the optical properties of brain tissue are poorly understood. We have investigated the effect of brain tissue on the 2P point spread function (PSF2P) by imaging fluorescent beads through living cortical slices. By combining this with measurements of the mean free path of the excitation light, adaptive optics and vector-based modeling that includes phase modulation and scattering, we show that tissue-induced wavefront distortions are the main determinant of enlargement and distortion of the PSF2P at intermediate imaging depths. Furthermore, they generate surrounding lobes that contain more than half of the 2P excitation. These effects reduce the resolution of fine structures and contrast and they, together with scattering, limit 2P excitation. Our results disentangle the contributions of scattering and wavefront distortion in shaping the cortical PSF2P, thereby providing a basis for improved 2P microscopy.

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S. Poland

University of Strathclyde

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Niall McAlinden

University of Strathclyde

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David Burns

University of Strathclyde

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G.J. Valentine

University of Strathclyde

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