1 April 1998 Using a light microscope to measure motions with nanometer accuracy
C. Quentin Davis, Dennis M. Freeman
Author Affiliations +
A system for measuring nanometer motions of microscopic structures is demonstrated. Stop-action images of a target are obtained with a light microscope, CCD camera, and stroboscopic illuminator. Motions are determined directly from measured images using algorithms from computer vision. The accuracy of motion measurements using the system is assessed using a moving target with calibrated displacements. Accuracy is determined for specimens viewed under our most optimal conditions as well as for a number of suboptimal conditions that illustrate important degradation mechanisms. Measured errors are compared to predictions based on computer simulations of theoretical models. Results show that the most important hardware factors include substrate vibrations and camera imperfections. Measurement errors for the most optimal hardware conditions are primarily due to systematic bias in the computer vision algorithms. For our most optimal conditions, the system can resolve motions as small as nanometers. Thus, errors in motion measurements are small compared to both the wavelength of the light used to obtain the images and the pixel spacing of the video microscope.
C. Quentin Davis and Dennis M. Freeman "Using a light microscope to measure motions with nanometer accuracy," Optical Engineering 37(4), (1 April 1998). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.601967
Published: 1 April 1998
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Cited by 123 scholarly publications and 8 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Motion measurement

Motion estimation

Microscopes

Error analysis

Light emitting diodes

Detection and tracking algorithms

Cameras

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