(Press-News.org) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Materials scientists can learn a lot about a sample material by shooting lasers at it. With nonlinear optical microscopy — a specialized imaging technique that looks for a change in the color of intense laser light — researchers can collect data on how the light interacts with the sample and, through time-consuming and sometimes expensive analyses, characterize the material’s structure and other properties. Now, researchers at Penn State have developed a computational framework that can interpret the nonlinear optical microscopy images to characterize the material in microscopic detail.
The team published their approach in the journal Optica.
“Nonlinear optical microscopy is an important tool that can reveal structural information about different materials,” said lead author Albert Suceava, doctoral student in materials science and engineering at Penn State. “The method, which looks for exotic interactions between matter and light, can be used to see things in material samples normally invisible to us otherwise. The samples you can study with this technique can come from anywhere. The method can be used in many fields ranging from biology to even quantum computing.”
The way our eyes see the world is through linear optical interactions like reflection, refraction and absorption, Suceava explained.
“Whereas in nonlinear optical microscopy, we use focused laser beams to get light that is more intense than what you can get with everyday light sources like sunlight,” Suceava said. “And this intense light can produce new kinds of optical signals that are detected to form an image. We can understand something about the structure of the material by looking at how these new signals change across a sample, or how they change with something like the polarization of the laser source. From there, we used our understanding of classical optical microscopes to develop a computational tool to interpret these images, which enables the determination of material properties at the microscopic scale.”
The work came about, the researchers said, when they observed unexpected phenomena in microscopy images and questioned whether it was due to the sample or the microscope.
“This whole project started when we were doing nonlinear microscopy on a sample that we thought we understood very well but we were seeing things in our images that we couldn't explain, almost like an optical illusion,” Suceava said. “So, we took a very long time to ensure the observations were not just an optical illusion but accurate data. We had to make sure that we were able to break down exactly what the microscope is doing to the light and to our probe when it’s focused very tightly. Our approach focuses on modeling the effects that tight laser focusing has on the polarization of light that is interacting with the sample.”
Light travels in the form of electromagnetic waves with unique frequencies and the interaction of atoms and molecules with light — also known as electromagnetic radiation — provides information about their structure.
“Light is a really central to seeing our world; in fact, our sense of physical reality is dominated by what we see,” said Venkatraman Gopalan, professor of materials science and engineering at Penn State and co-author on the paper. “Imaging with light is very fundamental and we are constantly looking at new ways of imaging things. It's all light interacting with atoms and scattering.”
The electromagnetic spectrum has many types of light waves, ranging from radio waves to gamma rays. Each type of light has a different wavelength and frequency, and scientists can use the information on how objects and materials emit, absorb, transmit or reflect light to investigate their properties.
“Atoms vibrate differently and make music; they dance to different beats, and light is like music,” Gopalan said. “From electrons to nuclei to clusters of atoms to their spins, they all sort of dance at different frequencies. It's almost like an opera. And when, for example, you want to know how atoms are vibrating, you may send in one color of light, and the atoms may vibrate and absorb some of that light. The light that's reflected back is slightly shorter and different in color. It has a slightly longer wavelength and smaller frequency, because that reflects the little bit of energy it gave off. Looking at the atomic scale structure and vibrations in molecules gives a very good signature of the material.”
There are many techniques of using light to study the properties of materials ranging from x-rays to thermal imaging. For this research, the team employed a technique known as second harmonic generation microscopy.
“Second harmonic generation is where a material changes the color of light by doubling its frequency,” Gopalan said. “It can detect signals that indicate a lopsided dance of electrons, which can reveal the polarity of materials. This doubling of frequency can turn an infrared into blue, which comes from this lopsided dance of electrons inside the atoms in these solids.”
The scientists say they can make an image from the signals, but truly characterizing a material requires more than just creating an image.
“We need to know what is going on, what are the atoms doing, what's going on with local properties but what the image is telling us has been a challenge because there's a lot more information than show and tell,” Gopalan said.
The goal was to develop a framework that accurately models the interaction of tightly focused light with samples in nonlinear optical microscopy, providing reliable quantitative information, according to the researchers.
The team tested their framework on a variety of reference materials, comparing the results to known properties. Suceava noted that by doing this, they were also able to extract quantitative information from samples. Understanding the specific features, along with the quantitative information, is critical for developing new materials and understanding their properties, Suceava said.
“Our framework tries to move beyond ‘look-and-see’ to actually say why an image looks the way it does,” Suceava said. “We want to know what additional information could be buried in the way images change with different light sources or different optics. We envision this framework as helping standardize the approach for data analysis in the non-linear optics community to improve consistency and reproducibility of characterizing materials. We think that we found a way to look at this problem that's simpler than how other people have done it and still gives very good agreement with known samples. By mapping the material properties instead of just snapping a photo, we can help build a library of material properties that can be used in various applications.”
Other Penn State researchers on the project include Sankalpa Hazra and John Hayden, graduate students, and Jadupati Nag, postdoctoral researcher, all in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering; Susan Trolier-McKinstry, Evan Pugh University Professor and Flaschen Professor of Ceramic Science and Engineering; and Jon-Paul Maria, Dorothy Pate Enright Professor of Materials Science and Engineering. Zhiwen Liu, professor of electrical engineering in Penn State’s College of Engineering and Safdar Imam, Abishek Iyer, and Mercouri Kanatzidis from Northwestern University also contributed.
Support was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Basic Energy Sciences and the Air Force’s Office of Scientific Research.
END
Shedding light on materials in the physical, biological sciences
Researchers developed a computational framework to evaluate nonlinear optical microscopy analyses, determine atomic structure of materials
2025-10-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study finds emotional tweets by politicians don’t always win followers and can backfire with diverse audiences
2025-10-15
Catonsville, MD, Oct. 15, 2025 – When a politician uses emotionality in social media to engage with his or her constituents, two things happen. One is the politician sees an increase in engagement with individual constituents and then at scale. The second outcome is that the politician may actually expand his or her following.
A new study, however, has shed light on just how much engagement can be expected from more emotionally charged communications, and whether this engagement actually leads to an expanded following or support base.
The research was published in the INFORMS journal Information Systems Research in an article entitled, “Emotionality in Political ...
Paul “Bear” Bryant Awards announce 2025 Coach of the Year Award watch list
2025-10-15
HOUSTON, Oct. 15, 2025 — Twenty-eight college football coaches make up the American Heart Association’s 2025 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award watch list, a list of current coaches in consideration for the annual top honor. The award is given each January to a college football coach for contributions that make the sport better for athletes and fans alike by demonstrating grit, integrity and a winning approach to coaching and life – both on and off the field.
The American Heart Association, ...
$3 million National Institute on Aging grant will provide much-needed support to underserved dementia caregivers
2025-10-15
More than 7 million Americans live with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD), supported by 12 million unpaid family caregivers whose contributions are valued at $413 billion annually. As the U.S. population continues to age, the number of people with dementia and their caregivers will nearly trip by 2050. Innovative solutions to support family caregivers are urgently needed.
Now, with a $3 million grant from the National Institute on Aging (NIA), digital health intervention researcher, Y. Alicia Hong, is poised to change that. Hong led an interdisciplinary team to develop the Wellness Enhancement for Caregivers (WECARE) as a ...
Study links obesity-driven fatty acids to breast cancer, warns against high-fat diets like keto
2025-10-15
A team from Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah (the U) has found that triple-negative breast cancer is fueled by lipids and that these fatty acids are a key feature of obesity that promote tumor growth. Their National Cancer Institute-funded research, conducted in preclinical mouse models, suggests that breast cancer patients and survivors with obesity could benefit from lipid lowering therapies—and that they should avoid high-fat weight loss regimens like ketogenic diets.
“The key here is that people have underestimated the importance of fats and lipids in the all-encompassing ...
Did lead limit brain and language development in Neanderthals and other extinct hominids?
2025-10-15
What set the modern human brain apart from our now extinct relatives like Neanderthals? A new study by University of California San Diego School of Medicine and an international team of researchers reveals that ancient hominids — including early humans and great apes — were exposed to lead earlier than previously thought, up to two million years before modern humans began mining the metal. This exposure may have shaped the evolution of hominid brains, limiting language and social development in all but modern humans due to a protective genetic variant that only we carry. The study was published in Science Advances on October 15, ...
New study reveals alarming mental health and substance use disparities among LGBTQ+ youth
2025-10-15
New research from the University of Delaware finds that LGBTQ+ adolescents in Delaware face strikingly higher rates of mental health challenges and substance use compared to their peers.
In one of the first state-level studies conducted after the COVID-19 pandemic, Assistant Professor Eric Layland and colleagues in UD’s College of Education and Human Development analyzed responses from more than 17,000 eighth and eleventh grade students collected through the 2022–2024 Delaware School Surveys. About one in four students identified as LGBTQ+ and ...
U.K. food insecurity is associated with mental health conditions
2025-10-15
Food insecurity affects about 1 in 13 (7.8%) U.K. households, with higher rates of food insecurity found in Black British households and people with long-term mental health conditions, according to a new study published October 15, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Maddy Power of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, U.K., and colleagues.
Food insecurity—defined as limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods—has become an increasingly urgent public health concern in the U.K. In the new study, researchers analyzed data from the 2019/20 Family Resource ...
At least eight bat species commute or forage over pig farms in Northern Italy
2025-10-15
At least eight bat species commute or forage over pig farms in Northern Italy, and the frequent absence of physical barriers and biosafety measures preventing contact between bats or bat feces and pigs could increase exposure risks to the diverse coronaviruses that circulate in these species
Article URL: http://plos.io/4mQ5Scy
Article title: A multi-disciplinary approach to identify spillover interfaces of bat coronaviruses to pig farms in Italy
Author countries: Italy, U.K.
Funding: The present work was supported by the First International ICRAD call under grant agreement N◦ 862605, ID 95 ConVErgence. END ...
Ancient teeth reveal mammalian responses to climate change in Southeast Asia
2025-10-15
Strictly embargoed until 15 October, 2025 at 14:00 (2:00 pm) U.S. Eastern Time
A new study published in Science Advances and led by the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology uncovers how flexibility made the difference between survival and extinction. By analyzing fossil teeth from Vietnam and Laos, an international team reconstructed the diets and habitats of extinct, extirpated, and still-living species. The results show that animals with varied diets and habitats were more likely to endure, while narrow specialists largely disappeared.
The team examined 141 fossil teeth dating from 150,000 to 13,000 years ago and combined them with existing records. Using stable isotope analysis ...
Targeting young adults beginning university may be especially effective for encouraging pro-environmental behaviors
2025-10-15
When starting college, many young people report adopting pro-environmental behaviors such as active travel (e.g. walking, biking) and reduced meat consumption, so targeted interventions in these transition moments could be especially effective.
Article URL: https://plos.io/4pZVamA
Article Title: Shifting horizons: Significant life events and pro-environmental behaviour change in early adulthood
Author Countries: United Kingdom
Funding: This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC), under the project “Understanding and leveraging ‘moments of change’ for pro-environmental behaviour shifts” [grant number: 820235 to LW; KM; MG; NN] ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Gene therapy delivers lasting immune protection in children with rare disorder
New world record set for fastest human whole genome sequencing, representing significant step towards revolutionizing genomic care in the NICU
Shedding light on materials in the physical, biological sciences
Study finds emotional tweets by politicians don’t always win followers and can backfire with diverse audiences
Paul “Bear” Bryant Awards announce 2025 Coach of the Year Award watch list
$3 million National Institute on Aging grant will provide much-needed support to underserved dementia caregivers
Study links obesity-driven fatty acids to breast cancer, warns against high-fat diets like keto
Did lead limit brain and language development in Neanderthals and other extinct hominids?
New study reveals alarming mental health and substance use disparities among LGBTQ+ youth
U.K. food insecurity is associated with mental health conditions
At least eight bat species commute or forage over pig farms in Northern Italy
Ancient teeth reveal mammalian responses to climate change in Southeast Asia
Targeting young adults beginning university may be especially effective for encouraging pro-environmental behaviors
This robotic skin allows tiny robots to navigate complex, fragile environments
‘Metabots’ shapeshift from flat sheets into hundreds of structures
Starting university boosts recycling and greener travel, a University of Bath study finds
How cilia choreograph their “Mexican wave”, enabling marine creatures to swim
Why women's brains face higher risk: scientists pinpoint X-chromosome gene behind MS and Alzheimer's
Ancient lead exposure shaped evolution of human brain
How the uplift of East Africa shaped its ecosystems: Climate model simulations reveal Miocene landscape transformation
Human Organ Chip technology sets stage for pan-influenza A CRISPR RNA therapies
Research alert: Bacterial chatter slows wound healing
American Society of Anesthesiologists names Patrick Giam, M.D., FASA, new president
High-entropy alloy nanozyme ROS biocatalyst treating tendinopathy via up-regulation of PGAM5/FUNDC1/GPX4 pathway
SwRI’s Dr. Pablo Bueno named AIAA Associate Fellow
Astronomers detect radio signals from a black hole tearing apart a star – outside a galactic center
Locking carbon in trees and soils could help ‘stabilize climate for centuries’ – but only if combined with underground storage
New research shows a tiny, regenerative worm could change our understanding of healing
Australia’s rainforests first to switch from carbon sink to source
First-trimester mRNA COVID-19 vaccination and risk of major congenital anomalies
[Press-News.org] Shedding light on materials in the physical, biological sciencesResearchers developed a computational framework to evaluate nonlinear optical microscopy analyses, determine atomic structure of materials