Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision | ||
docs:comparison_with_confocal [2015/06/15 22:30] Jon Daniels |
docs:comparison_with_confocal [2016/05/09 23:18] (current) Jon Daniels |
||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
===== Comparison of diSPIM With Confocal ===== | ===== Comparison of diSPIM With Confocal ===== | ||
- | The following comparison was written with diSPIM in mind, but the main points apply to all types of SPIM. | + | The following comparison was written with diSPIM in mind, but the main points apply to all types of SPIM/LSFM. |
- | | + | Spinning disk confocal (SDCM) is just a massively parallel confocal implementation so it's faster but otherwise has the same characteristics as laser scanning confocal. |
- | * In general for X slices | + | |
- | * [[http:// | + | |
- | * Confocal | + | * A rule of thumb is that you need X times as much light for confocal as you do for SPIM where X is the number of slices in your stack. |
- | | + | * [[http:// |
- | * diSPIM is comparable speed (per view) to to spinning disk confocal (assuming you increase the laser intensity to make up for the ~3% open area of the spinning | + | * **Z resolution: |
+ | * Using Bessel beams to create the sheet can improve Z-resolution for single-view SPIM (" | ||
+ | * **XY resolution:** confocal | ||
+ | * **Speed:** SPIM (per view) and SDCM have comparable speed if SDCM laser intensity | ||
+ | * Camera readout speed bounds the maximum achievable frame rate. For example, 512 pixels high ROI is 2.5 ms readout time for sCMOS. |