(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON — Researchers have developed a new type of microscope that can acquire extremely large, high-resolution pictures of non-flat objects in a single snapshot. This innovation could speed up research and medical diagnostics or be useful in quality inspection applications.
“Although traditional microscopes assume the sample is perfectly flat, real-life samples such as tissue sections, plant samples or flexible materials may be curved, tilted or uneven,” said research team leader Roarke Horstmeyer from Duke University. “With our approach, it’s possible to adjust the focus across the sample, so that everything remains in focus even if the sample surface isn’t flat, while avoiding slow scanning or expensive special lenses.”
In the Optica Publishing Group journal Optics Letters, the researchers show that the microscope, which they call PANORAMA, can capture submicron details — 1/60 to 1/120 the diameter of a human hair — across an area roughly the size of a U.S. dime without moving the sample. It produces a detailed gigapixel-scale image, which has 10 to 50 times more pixels than the average smartphone camera image.
“This tool can be used wherever large-area, detailed imaging is needed. For instance, in medical pathology, it could scan entire tissue slides, such as those from a biopsy, at cellular resolution almost instantly,” said Haitao Chen, a doctoral student in Horstmeyer’s lab. “In materials science or industrial inspection, it could quickly inspect large surfaces such as a chip wafer at high detail.”
Large-scale clarity
Conventional microscopes almost always have a trade-off between imaging a small area with high detail or a large area in low detail. Producing high-resolution gigapixel images typically requires complex optics or the time-consuming task of tile scanning of a sample. Additionally, real samples are rarely perfectly flat across a centimeter-scale view, which typically requires mechanically scanning the sample up and down to keep various parts in focus, further slowing down the imaging process.
To overcome these challenges, the researchers created what can be thought of as a multiple-camera system that acts like a single giant microscope. The microscope combines a telecentric lens originally developed for chip-making with a large tube lens that projects an image of the sample onto a flat array of 48 small cameras, each imaging a portion of the scene or sample.
Because each camera can be independently focused to match the sample surface, the entire field of view stays sharp even if the sample is curved. This eliminates the need for scanning, which can take up to an hour. The images from each camera are automatically stitched together into a continuous picture using software, a process that takes about 5 to 10 minutes.
“The telecentric lens makes it possible to image a very wide field without distortion, while the multi-camera approach overcomes the usual size-and-resolution limit of a single sensor,” said Chen. “This combination lets us acquire a seamless, gigapixel image in a single snapshot, flattening out any curvature adaptively.”
One shot, high detail
The researchers tested the new microscope by imaging a prepared slide of rat brain tissue under brightfield illumination, which uses white light to reveal tissue structure. Without any scanning, the 48-camera array captured the entire slice — a 630 MP image — in one snapshot. The resulting image clearly showed cellular structures measuring as small as 0.84 µm, as well as neurons and dendrites across the sample.
They also used the microscope to simultaneously acquire a brightfield and fluorescence image of onion skin laid over a gently curved surface. When they focused each camera on the local curvature, the entire curved layer stayed sharp. The brightfield images revealed crisp cell walls, while the fluorescence images clearly showed stained nuclei.
“In practical terms, we saw a huge jump in throughput and flexibility: no more moving parts, no tedious focus-stacking, and no blind spots between cameras,” said Horstmeyer. “Compared to older multi-camera microscopes that needed scanning to fill gaps and maintain focus, our approach gives continuous full coverage at sub-micron resolution.”
The researchers are now working to improve the microscope by adding more cameras or larger sensors to capture an even bigger field — such as an entire petri dish — in a single shot. They are also developing an automated focus system so each camera no longer has to be adjusted manually for every sample. Computational advances could also enable 3D reconstructions, real-time depth maps or live video of microscopic processes.
Paper: X. Yang, H. Chen, L. Kreiss, C.B. Cook, G. Kuczewski, M. Harfouche, M.O. Bohlen, R. Horstmeyer, “Curvature-adaptive gigapixel microscopy at submicron resolution and centimeter scale,” Opt. Lett., 50, (2025).
DOI: 10.1364/OL.572466
About Optica Publishing Group
Optica Publishing Group is a division of the society, Optica, Advancing Optics and Photonics Worldwide. It publishes the largest collection of peer-reviewed and most-cited content in optics and photonics, including 18 prestigious journals, the society’s flagship member magazine, and papers and videos from more than 835 conferences. With over 400,000 journal articles, conference papers and videos to search, discover and access, our publications portfolio represents the full range of research in the field from around the globe.
About Optics Letters
Optics Letters has been publishing high-impact research in the field of photonics for over 45 years and offers rapid dissemination of new results in all areas of optical science with short, original, peer-reviewed communications. Optics Letters accepts papers that are noteworthy to a substantial part of the optics community. Published by Optica Publishing Group and led by Editor-in-Chief Miguel Alonso, Institut Fresnel, École Centrale de Marseille and Aix-Marseille Université, France, University of Rochester, USA. For more information, visit Optics Letters.
Media Contact
mediarelations@optica.org
END
New microscope captures large, high-resolution images of curved samples in single snapshot
Innovation promises faster insights for biology, medicine and industrial applications
2025-09-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
SwRI, UT San Antonio will test technology designed to support extended space missions to Moon, Mars
2025-09-17
SAN ANTONIO —September 17, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and The University of Texas at San Antonio (UT San Antonio) will flight test novel electrolyzer technology to better understand chemical processes associated with bubble formation in low gravity. Designed to solve future space mission challenges, the project, led by SwRI’s Kevin Supak and UT San Antonio’s Dr. Shrihari Sankarasubramanian, is supported by a $125,000 grant from the Connecting through Research Partnerships (Connect) program, ...
Hot flashes can be reliably predicted by an ai-driven algorithm developed by UMass Amherst and Embr Labs
2025-09-17
AMHERST, Mass. — University of Massachusetts Amherst researchers and scientists at Embr Labs, a Boston-based start-up, have developed an AI-driven algorithm that can accurately predict nearly 70% of hot flashes before they’re perceived. The work, featured in the journal Psychophysiology, will be incorporated into the Embr Wave, a wearable wrist device clinically proven to manage hot flashes.
In the U.S. alone, an estimated 1.3 million women transition into menopause annually, and 80% of women experience hot flashes — sudden feelings of intense heat, often radiating in the upper body. Most hot flashes occur during this transition, ...
FAU/Baptist Health AI spine model could transform lower back pain treatment
2025-09-17
Nearly 3 in 10 adults in the United States have experienced lower back pain in any three-month period, making it the most common musculoskeletal pain. Back pain remains one of the leading causes of disability worldwide, affecting millions and often leading to chronic discomfort, missed work and invasive procedures.
Researchers and clinicians are increasingly turning to lumbar spine modeling, which bridges engineering and medicine, creating a virtual, patient-specific model of the lower back. This technology simulates how the spine ...
CDI Lab, HMH specialists identify vital pathway initiating cellular immunity in Science Immunology journal
2025-09-17
A researcher at the Hackensack Meridian Center for Discovery and Innovation (CDI) and physician-scientist colleagues from Hackensack Meridian Health have shown how a critical pathway is fundamental to the immune system.
The results by Hai-Hui “Howard” Xue, Ph.D., and colleagues are published in the latest edition of Science Immunology - and could have implications in cancer immunotherapy and vaccine developments for years to come.
Establishing cellular immunity depends on the thymus, a lymph gland located in front of the heart. This gland produces and exports T cells, a workhorse white blood cell, ...
University of Pennsylvania professor to receive the 2025 Clinical Research Prize
2025-09-17
Embargoed until 7 a.m. CT/8 a.m. ET, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025
DALLAS, Sept. 17, 2025 — Barbara Riegel, Ph.D., R.N., FAHA, Emerita Edith Clemmer Steinbright Professor of Gerontology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, will receive the American Heart Association’s 2025 Clinical Research Prize at the Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025. The meeting, to be held Nov. 7-10, 2025, in New Orleans is a premier global exchange of the latest scientific advancements, research and evidence-based clinical practice ...
Revolutionary scandium doping technique extends sodium-ion battery life
2025-09-17
Because lithium is relatively scarce and sodium is abundant in Earth’s crust, sodium-ion batteries are being investigated as viable cost-effective alternatives to the widely used lithium-ion batteries. In these batteries, the choice of cathode material primarily influences battery capacity and stability. Layered sodium manganese oxides (Na2/3MnO2) have attracted significant attention in recent years as cathode materials for high-capacity sodium-ion batteries without using any rare-earth metals. However, while these materials ...
High-fat diet impairs memory formation by reducing autophagy
2025-09-17
Modern lifestyles and dietary changes have significantly increased the consumption of high-fat foods, contributing to a steep rise in the prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and metabolic disorders. Furthermore, a high-fat diet (HFD) is linked to cognitive impairments and neurodegeneration and has been shown to worsen the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease—a progressive neurodegenerative condition—in mouse models. Yet, the underlying mechanisms remain largely elusive.
Autophagy, a crucial cellular recycling process, helps maintain neuronal health. Recent studies have shown that impaired autophagy contributes to neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. But is autophagy linked ...
Keck Hospital of USC named a Vizient Top Performer for third year in a row
2025-09-17
LOS ANGELES — Keck Hospital of USC has been named a top performer in Vizient Inc.’s 2025 Bernard A. Birnbaum, MD, Quality Leadership award, recognizing the hospital’s excellence in delivering high-quality care.
This is the third year in a row the hospital has been named a top performer, the highest possible recognition. Keck Hospital ranked 12th out of 118 comprehensive academic medical centers nationwide.
“Keck Hospital puts quality care above all else, and being recognized as a top performer validates the hospital’s mission to deliver ...
New CRISPR test could make tuberculosis screening as simple as a mouth swab
2025-09-17
Tulane University researchers have developed an enhanced CRISPR-based tuberculosis test that works with a simple tongue swab, a potential breakthrough that could allow easier, community-based screenings for the world’s deadliest infectious disease.
Current TB tests rely on sputum, mucus collected from the lungs and lower respiratory system. While rich in TB bacteria required for testing, collecting sputum is difficult, making it inefficient for large-scale community testing. Sputum testing is also unfeasible in about 25% of symptomatic cases and nearly 90% of asymptomatic cases, a gap which contributes to an estimated 4 million tuberculosis cases going undiagnosed ...
Three-sensor overeating detection could reshape obesity treatment
2025-09-17
Study participants wore a necklace, wristband and body camera to capture real-world eating behaviors
Seeing overeating patterns in the data ‘felt like turning on a light in a room we've all been stumbling through for decades’
Findings lay groundwork for personalized overeating interventions that feel ‘less like a prescription and more like a partnership’
CHICAGO --- What if your smart watch could sense when you're about to raid the fridge, and gently steer you toward a healthier choice instead?
Northwestern University scientists are bringing that vision closer to reality with a groundbreaking lifestyle medicine program that uses three wearable ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Can your driving patterns predict cognitive decline?
New electrochemical strategy boosts uranium recovery from complex wastewater
Study links America’s favorite cooking oil to obesity
Famous Easter Island statues were created without centralized management
Captive male Asian elephants can live together peacefully and with little stress, if introduced slowly and carefully, per Laos case study of 8 unrelated males
The Galapagos and other oceanic islands and Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) may be "critical" refuges for sharks in the Tropical Eastern Pacific, as predatory fish appear depleted in more coastal MPAs t
Why are shiny colours rare yet widespread in nature?
Climate-vulnerable districts of India face significantly higher risks of adverse health outcomes, including 25% higher rates of underweight children
New study reveals spatial patterns of crime rates and media coverage across Chicago
Expanding seasonal immunization access could minimize off-season RSV epidemics
First-of-its-kind 3D model lets you explore Easter Island statues up close
foldable and rollable interlaced origami structure: Folds and rolls up for storage and deploys with high strength
Possible therapeutic approach to treat diabetic nerve damage discovered
UBC ‘body-swap’ robot helps reveal how the brain keeps us upright
Extensive survey of Eastern tropical Pacific finds remote protected areas harbor some of the highest concentrations of sharks
High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients
Global Virus Network statement on the Marburg virus outbreak in Ethiopia
'Exploitative' online money gaming in India causing financial, health and social harm, analysis shows
Mayo Clinic researchers identify why some lung tumors respond well to immunotherapy
The pterosaur rapidly evolved flight abilities, in contrast to modern bird ancestors, new study suggests
Farms could be our secret climate weapon, QUT-led study finds
New research by ASU paleoanthropologists gives valuable insight into how two ancient human ancestors coexisted in the same area
Therapeutic use of cannabis and cannabinoids
‘Cognitive Legos’ help the brain build complex behaviors
From inhibition to destruction – kinase drugs found to trigger protein degradation
Diamond defects, now in pairs, reveal hidden fluctuations in the quantum world
Metastatic recurrence among adolescents and young adults with cancer
Disrupted federal funding for extramural cancer research
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and chronic cough
The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires and outpatient acute health care utilization
[Press-News.org] New microscope captures large, high-resolution images of curved samples in single snapshotInnovation promises faster insights for biology, medicine and industrial applications