OSC Colloquium: George Gordon, "Imaging Through Optical Fibers for Hair-Thin Endo-Microscopes"
Feb. 3, 2022
George Gordon
Title: “Imaging Through Optical Fibers for Hair-Thin Endo-Microscopes”
Abstract(s):
Optical endoscopes are widely used in medicine to identify early-stage cancers in accessible parts of the body, such as the gastrointestinal tract, enabling early treatment and better patient outcomes. However, the next generation of endoscopes must overcome two key challenges to have a truly transformative impact. The first is size: hair-thin endoscopes would vastly expand the range of the body that can be examined in detail with minimal invasiveness, e.g. inside organs such as the pancreas via a needle, or inside tiny blood capillaries. The second is contrast: when imaging large regions it is difficult to identify subtle tissue changes indicative of early cancer. To overcome this, we have been developing a new type of endoscope that produces images through optical fibers: flexible hair-thin pieces of glass. This is achieved by full holographic control of light in the fibers, which in turn allows advanced microscopy modalities to be implemented at the fiber tip offering improved imaging contrast. In this talk I will introduce the fundamentals of our fiber imaging technique and show how it can achieve quantitative phase and polarimetric imaging of tissue. I will then show how using nano-structured optical metasurfaces and computational optics techniques will enable future clinical translation of this technology.
Speaker Bio(s):
Dr. George Gordon,
Associate Professor in Optics, Photonics, and Medical Imaging
University of Nottingham
George Gordon is an Associate Professor and UKRI Future Leaders Fellow in the Department of Engineering at the University of Nottingham. He leads the OPTIMlab group, a team of 5 researchers working on optics, photonics and medical imaging, specifically developing new types of optical endoscopes that improve detection of diseases such as cancer. His related research interests also include digital holographic imaging and displays, artificial intelligence, nano-structured optical metasurfaces and clinical studies. Prior to this role, George was a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge where he built a fully holographic fiber endoscope and developed low-cost imaging techniques to improve early cancer detection. He received his Ph.D. in 2013 from the University of Cambridge on the topic of Wireless and Optical Telecommunications. Originally from New Zealand, George completed his undergraduate degree in Electrical and Electronic Engineering at the University of Auckland. He is an author of more than 30 peer-reviewed journal publications, on topics ranging from optical fibres to nanotechnology to reinforcement learning.
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