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Confocal microscopy is an essential imaging tool for biological systems, in solid-state physics and nano-photonics. Using confocal microscopes allows performing resonant fluorescence experiments, where the emitted light has the same wavelength as the excitation laser. Theses challenging experiments are carried out under linear cross-polarization conditions, rejecting laser light from the detector. In this work we uncover the physical mechanisms that are at the origin of the yet unexplained high polarization rejection ratio which makes these measurements possible. We show in both experiment and theory that the use of a reflecting surface (i.e. the beam-splitter and mirrors) placed between the polarizer and analyzer in combination with a confocal arrangement explains the giant cross-polarization extinction ratio of 10^8 and beyond. We map the modal transformation of the polarized optical Gaussian beam. We find an intensity hole in the reflected beam under cross-polarization conditions. We interpret this as a manifestation of the Imbert-Fedorov effect, which deviates the beam depending on its polarization helicity. This implies that this topological effect is amplified here from the usually observed nanometer to the micrometer scale due to our cross-polarization dark field methods. We confirm these experimental findings for a large variety of commercially available mirrors and polarization components, allowing their practical implementation in many experiments.
We introduce a new modality for dynamic phase imaging in confocal microscopy based on synthetic optical holography. By temporal demultiplexing of the detector signal into a series of holograms, we record time-resolved phase images directly in the tim
We present a new flexible high speed laser scanning confocal microscope and its extension by an astigmatism particle tracking device (APTV). Many standard confocal microscopes use either a single laser beam to scan the sample at relatively low overal
Spatial resolution is one of the most important specifications of an imaging system. Recent results in quantum parameter estimation theory reveal that an arbitrarily small distance between two incoherent point sources can always be efficiently determ
We present a technically simple implementation of quantitative phase imaging in confocal microscopy based on synthetic optical holography with sinusoidal-phase reference waves. Using a Mirau interference objective and low-amplitude vertical sample vi
Polarized light microscopy provides high contrast to birefringent specimen and is widely used as a diagnostic tool in pathology. However, polarization microscopy systems typically operate by analyzing images collected from two or more light paths in