Structured detection microscopy
Abstract
Super-resolution microscopy is crucial for imaging sub-wavelength biological structures. However, most techniques rely on nonlinear saturation or stochastic switching of emitters, limiting imaging speed and increasing phototoxicity. Here, we achieve deep super-resolution without employing saturation or stochastic dynamics, instead using a form of spatial mode demultiplexing. By shaping the point-spread function of the emitted light, our Structured Detection Microscope (SDM) redistributes information away from high shot-noise regions of the image, enhancing sensitivity to sub-diffraction emitter separations in two-dimensions and without mode-sorting optics. Implementing SDM within a high-numerical aperture total internal reflection fluorescence microscope, we demonstrate imaging of fluorophores attached to DNA nanorulers with separations as small as 50 nm at resolutions surpassing 40 nm - fivefold below the diffraction limit. This shows that spatial mode demultiplexing can achieve far sub-wavelength resolution and is applicable to biologically relevant samples. By enabling super-resolution biomolecular imaging without emitter saturation and stochasticity, our work opens the door to better understanding biological structure, function and dynamics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2604.00413,
title = {Structured detection microscopy},
author = {Larnii Booth and Kyle Clunies-Ross and Rumelo Amor and Nicolas Mauranyapin and Zixin Huang and Michael A. Taylor and Warwick P. Bowen},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.00413},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
Main text, 8 pages, 4 figures; Supplementary Materials, 9 pages, 4 figures