Applied Physics Letters, Volume 106, Issue 16 , 20/04/2015
Three-dimensional imaging of biological cells with picosecond ultrasonics
Abstract
We use picosecond ultrasonics to image animal cells in vitro - a bovine aortic endothelial cell and a mouse adipose cell - fixed to Ti-coated sapphire. Tightly focused ultrashort laser pulses generate and detect GHz acoustic pulses, allowing three-dimensional imaging (x, y, and t) of the ultrasonic propagation in the cells with ∼1μm lateral and ∼150nm depth resolutions. Time-frequency representations of the continuous-wavelet-transform amplitude of the optical reflectivity variations inside and outside the cells show GHz Brillouin oscillations, allowing the average sound velocities of the cells and their ultrasonic attenuation to be obtained as well as the average bulk moduli.
Document Type
Article
Source Type
Journal
ASJC Subject Area
Physics and Astronomy : Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
Funding Agency
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science