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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Feuchter.
Optics Express | 2016
Sylvain Rivet; Michael Maria; Adrian Bradu; Thomas Feuchter; Lasse Leick; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
A general theoretical model is developed to improve the novel Spectral Domain Interferometry method denoted as Master/Slave (MS) Interferometry. In this model, two functions, g and h are introduced to describe the modulation chirp of the channeled spectrum signal due to nonlinearities in the decoding process from wavenumber to time and due to dispersion in the interferometer. The utilization of these two functions brings two major improvements to previous implementations of the MS method. A first improvement consists in reducing the number of channeled spectra necessary to be collected at Master stage. In previous MSI implementation, the number of channeled spectra at the Master stage equated the number of depths where information was selected from at the Slave stage. The paper demonstrates that two experimental channeled spectra only acquired at Master stage suffice to produce A-scans from any number of resolved depths at the Slave stage. A second improvement is the utilization of complex signal processing. Previous MSI implementations discarded the phase. Complex processing of the electrical signal determined by the channeled spectrum allows phase processing that opens several novel avenues. A first consequence of such signal processing is reduction in the random component of the phase without affecting the axial resolution. In previous MSI implementations, phase instabilities were reduced by an average over the wavenumber that led to reduction in the axial resolution.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Mikkel Jensen; Niels Møller Israelsen; Michael Maria; Thomas Feuchter; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu; Ole Bang
In ultra-high resolution (UHR-) optical coherence tomography (OCT) group velocity dispersion (GVD) must be corrected for in order to approach the theoretical resolution limit. One approach promises not only compensation, but complete annihilation of even order dispersion effects, and that at all sample depths. This approach has hitherto been demonstrated with an experimentally demanding ‘balanced detection’ configuration based on using two detectors. We demonstrate intensity correlation (IC) OCT using a conventional spectral domain (SD) UHR-OCT system with a single detector. IC-SD-OCT configurations exhibit cross term ghost images and a reduced axial range, half of that of conventional SD-OCT. We demonstrate that both shortcomings can be removed by applying a generic artefact reduction algorithm and using analytic interferograms. We show the superiority of IC-SD-OCT compared to conventional SD-OCT by showing how IC-SD-OCT is able to image spatial structures behind a strongly dispersive silicon wafer. Finally, we question the resolution enhancement of
Biomedical Optics Express | 2017
Sophie Caujolle; Ramona Cernat; G. Silvestri; Manuel J. Marques; Adrian Bradu; Thomas Feuchter; Gary K. Robinson; Darren K. Griffin; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Michael Maria; Manuel J. Marques; Christopher Costa; Adrian Bradu; Thomas Feuchter; Lasse Leick; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
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Scientific Reports | 2018
Adrian Bradu; Niels Møller Israelsen; Michael Maria; Manuel J. Marques; Sylvain Rivet; Thomas Feuchter; Ole Bang; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
SPIE Photonics West 2018: SPIE BIOS: Design and Quality for Biomedical Technologies XI | 2018
Ivan B. Gonzalo; Michael Maria; Rasmus Dybbro Engelsholm; Thomas Feuchter; Lasse Leick; Peter M. Moselund; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu; Ole Bang
2 that IC-SD-OCT is often believed to have compared to SD-OCT. We show that this is simply the effect of squaring the reflectivity profile as a natural result of processing the product of two intensity spectra instead of a single spectrum.
2nd Canterbury Conference on OCT with Emphasis on Broadband Optical Sources | 2018
Niels Møller Israelsen; Michael Maria; Thomas Feuchter; Adrian Bradu; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu; Ole Bang
The morphology of embryos produced by in vitro fertilization (IVF) is commonly used to estimate their viability. However, imaging by standard microscopy is subjective and unable to assess the embryo on a cellular scale after compaction. Optical coherence tomography is an imaging technique that can produce a depth-resolved profile of a sample and can be coupled with speckle variance (SV) to detect motion on a micron scale. In this study, day 7 post-IVF bovine embryos were observed either short-term (10 minutes) or long-term (over 18 hours) and analyzed by swept source OCT and SV to resolve their depth profile and characterize micron-scale movements potentially associated with viability. The percentage of en face images showing movement at any given time was calculated as a method to detect the vital status of the embryo. This method could be used to measure the levels of damage sustained by an embryo, for example after cryopreservation, in a rapid and non-invasive way.
2nd Canterbury Conference on OCT with Emphasis on Broadband Optical Sources | 2018
Felix Fleischhauer; Thomas Feuchter; Lasse Leick; Ranjan Rajendram; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
In this report we applied the principle of Master-Slave Interferometry (MSI) to an Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) employing a Super-Continuum (SC) light source. A-scans and B-scan images of biological and non-biological sample are presented in order to demonstrate similar performance with the images obtained with the resampled Fourier Transform (FT) based OCT technique. Dispersion tolerance of MSI method is demonstrated as a constant axial resolution over the depth range even though dispersion is left uncompenstaed in the system.
2nd Canterbury Conference on OCT with Emphasis on Broadband Optical Sources | 2018
Sylvain Rivet; Adrian Bradu; Michael Maria; Thomas Feuchter; Lasse Leick; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
This work evaluates the performance of the Complex Master Slave (CMS) method, that processes the spectra at the interferometer output of a spectral domain interferometry device without involving Fourier transforms (FT) after data acquisition. Reliability and performance of CMS are compared side by side with the conventional method based on FT, phase calibration with dispersion compensation (PCDC). We demonstrate that both methods provide similar results in terms of resolution and sensitivity drop-off. The mathematical operations required to produce CMS results are highly parallelizable, allowing real-time, simultaneous delivery of data from several points of different optical path differences in the interferometer, not possible via PCDC.
2nd Canterbury Conference on OCT with Emphasis on Broadband Optical Sources | 2018
Sophie Caujolle; Ramona Cernat; Giuseppe Silvestri; Manuel J. Marques; Adrian Bradu; Thomas Feuchter; Gary K. Robinson; Darran Griffin; Adrian Gh. Podoleanu
Supercontinuum (SC) sources are of great interest for many applications due to their ultra-broad optical bandwidth, good beam quality and high power spectral density [1]. In particular, the high average power over large bandwidths makes SC light sources excellent candidates for ultra-high resolution optical coherence tomography (UHR-OCT) [2-5]. However, conventional SC sources suffer from high pulse-to-pulse intensity fluctuations as a result of the noise-sensitive nonlinear effects involved in the SC generation process [6-9]. This intensity noise from the SC source can limit the performance of OCT, resulting in a reduced signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) [10-12]. Much work has been done to reduce the noise of the SC sources for instance with fiber tapers [7,8] or increasing the repetition rate of the pump laser for averaging in the spectrometer [10,12]. An alternative approach is to use all-normal dispersion (ANDi) fibers [13,14] to generate SC light from well-known coherent nonlinear processes [15-17]. In fact, reduction of SC noise using ANDi fibers compared to anomalous dispersion SC pumped by sub-picosecond pulses has been recently demonstrated [18], but a cladding mode was used to stabilize the ANDi SC. In this work, we characterize the noise performance of a femtosecond pumped ANDi based SC and a commercial SC source in an UHR-OCT system at 1300 nm. We show that the ANDi based SC presents exceptional noise properties compared to a commercial source. An improvement of ~5 dB in SNR is measured in the UHR-OCT system, and the noise behavior resembles that of a superluminiscent diode. This preliminary study is a step forward towards development of an ultra-low noise SC source at 1300 nm for ultra-high resolution OCT.