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1.
Opt Express ; 9(12): 637-44, 2001 Dec 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19424301

RESUMO

A novel high-resolution stage scanning confocal microscope for fluorescence microscopy and spatially resolved spectroscopy with a high numerical aperture (NA 1) parabolic mirror objective is investigated. A spatial resolution close to the diffraction limit is achieved. As microscopic fluorescent test objects, dye-loaded zeolite microcrystals (diameter approx. 0.4 microm) and single fluorescent molecules were used. Confocal fluorescence images show a spatial resolution of .x = 0.8 . both at room temperature and at 1.8 K. Imaging of a quasi-point light source and focusing by the parabolic mirror were investigated experimentally and theoretically. Deviations between the theoretical results for a perfect parabolic mirror and the experimental results can be attributed to small deviations of the mirror profile from an ideal parabola.

2.
Appl Opt ; 33(34): 7995-8000, 1994 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20963015

RESUMO

We present a detailed analysis of a standing evanescent wave that is caused by total internal reflection of an Ar-ion laser beam on a glass prism and investigate the coupling to a subwavelength dielectric tip of a photon-scanning tunneling microscope that is raster scanned at a close distance over the prism surface. The intensity of the evanescent field is spatially modulated with a period of 239.2 nm. It decays exponentially with a constant of 103.9 nm with increasing distance from the prism surface. Precise measurements of the standing evanescent wave can be used to calibrate the scanner and permit one to determine the spatial resolution and the coupling efficiency of the tip.

4.
Science ; 255(5044): 583-6, 1992 Jan 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17792381

RESUMO

The topographic and magnetic surface structure of a natural single crystal of magnetite (Fe(3)0(4)), a common mineral, has been studied from the submicrometer scale down to the atomic scale with a scanning tunneling microscope having nonmagnetic tungsten as well as ferromagnetic iron probe tips. Several different (001) crystal planes were imaged to atomic resolution with both kinds of tips. A selective imaging of the octahedrally coordinated Fe B-sites in the Fe-O planes, and even a selective imaging of the different magnetic ions Fe(2+) and Fe(3+), has been achieved, demonstrating for the first time that magnetic imaging can be realized at the atomic level.

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