Metadata
Title
Real time aberration correction in laser scanning systems
Category
general
UUID
cd69bc25009b4534ac1fd5061bed6130
Source URL
https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/technology-marketplace/real-time-abe...
Parent URL
https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/innovation-marketplace
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T01:25:02+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Real time aberration correction in laser scanning systems

Source: https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/technology-marketplace/real-time-aberration-correction-in-laser-scanning-systems Parent: https://research.anu.edu.au/partner-with-us/innovation-marketplace

Social implications of disruptive technologies

Physical sciences

This technology is an adaptive optics solution for laser scanning systems that provides rapid removal of up to 50 aberrations across the field of view in milliseconds. This produces diffraction limited performance across the millimetre scale in three dimensions. The system can be retrofitted to any laser scanning device with the utility demonstrated in a laser scanning microscope (Figure 1).

Figure 1: Demonstration of the ability of the adaptive optics system to project and remove aberrations across the extended field of view (FOV) in a laser scanning microscope. Panel a) outlines the time multiplexing segments of the current and extended FOV defined by the objective and which were updated in 500 milliseconds. The corresponding improvement in intensity across the entire FOV is indicated in Panel b).

Potential benefits

Potential applications

Opportunity

ANU is seeking industry and customer feedback for this technology, as well as engagement with industry partners/customers to work collaboratively with us to further develop the idea and optimise the adaptive optics design for their specific application and equipment requirement

IP status

Provisional patent filed (AU2019904929; priority date 24 Dec 2019)

Related publications: Raster adaptive optics for video rate aberration correction and large FOV multiphoton imaging. Biomedical Optics Express. https://doi.org/10.1364/BOE.377044

Key research team

Dr Shannon Das

shannon.das@anu.edu.au

+61 2 6125 1890