Description
Multiphoton microscopy uses pulsed long-wavelength light to excite fluorophores within the specimen being observed. The fluorophore absorbs the energy from two long-wavelength photons which must arrive simultaneously in order to excite an electron into a higher energy state, from which it can decay, emitting a fluorescence signal. It differs from traditional fluorescence microscopy in which the excitation wavelength is shorter than the emission wavelength, as the summed energies of two long-wavelength exciting photons will produce an emission wavelength shorter than the excitation wavelength. Multiphoton fluorescence microscopy has similarities to confocal LSM. Both use focused laser beams scanned in a raster pattern to generate images, and both have an optical sectioning effect. Unlike confocal microscopes, multiphoton microscopes do not contain pinhole apertures, which give confocal microscopes their optical sectioning quality.
The longer wavelength, low energy (typically infra-red) excitation lasers of multiphoton microscopes are well-suited to use in imaging live cells as they cause less damage than short-wavelength lasers, so cells may be observed for longer periods with fewer toxic effects.
Labs Using this Technology
Servicio de Microscopia Optica y Confocal
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Advanced Optical Microscopy
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Servicio de Microscopia de Super-Resolucion y Nanoscopia- ICFO
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Microscopy and Dynamic Imaging Unit
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Advanced Light Microscopy Unit
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Leica TCS SP5 CFS (upright) Leica TCS SP5 AOBS (inverted)
SCSIE-Secció de Microscòpia
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
Servicio de Tecnicas Aplicadas a las Biociencias
Non-Linear Imaging/ Multiphoton fluorescence Imaging
3D reconstruction, Deep Tissue Imaging, Mosaic and Tile Imaging, Fluorescent Proteins Imaging.