Patents by Inventor James H. Swoger

James H. Swoger has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 9857577
    Abstract: A microscope and imaging method in which a layer of the sample is illuminated by a thin strip of light and the sample is viewed perpendicular to the plane of the strip of light. The depth of the strip of light thus essentially determines the depth of focus of the system. To record the image, the object is displaced through the strip of light, which remains fixed in relation to the detector, and fluorescent and/or diffused light is captured by a planar detector. Objects that absorb or diffuse a large amount of light are viewed from several spatial directions. The three-dimensional images, which are captured from each direction can be combined retrospectively to form one image, in which the data is weighted according to its resolution. The resolution of the combined image is then dominated by the lateral resolution of the individual images.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 22, 2013
    Date of Patent: January 2, 2018
    Assignee: European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)
    Inventors: Ernst H. K. Stelzer, Sebastian Enders, Jan Huisken, Steffen Lindek, James H. Swoger
  • Publication number: 20140042339
    Abstract: A microscope and imaging method in which a layer of the sample is illuminated by a thin strip of light and the sample is viewed perpendicular to the plane of the strip of light. The depth of the strip of light thus essentially determines the depth of focus of the system. To record the image, the object is displaced through the strip of light, which remains fixed in relation to the detector, and fluorescent and/or diffused light is captured by a planar detector. Objects that absorb or diffuse a large amount of light are viewed from several spatial directions. The three-dimensional images, which are captured from each direction can be combined retrospectively to form one image, in which the data is weighted according to its resolution. The resolution of the combined image is then dominated by the lateral resolution of the individual images.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 22, 2013
    Publication date: February 13, 2014
    Applicant: EUROPEAN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LABORATORY (EMBL)
    Inventors: Ernst H.K. Stelzer, Sebastian Enders, Jan Huisken, Steffen Lindek, James H. Swoger
  • Publication number: 20090225413
    Abstract: The invention relates to a microscope, in which a layer of the sample is illuminated by a thin strip of light (11) and the sample is viewed (5) perpendicular to the plane of the strip of light. The depth of the strip of light (11) thus essentially determines the depth of focus of the system. To record the image, the object (4) is displaced through the strip of light (11), which remains fixed in relation to the detector (8), and fluorescent and/or diffused light is captured by a planar detector. Objects (4) that absorb or diffuse a large amount of light are viewed from several spatial directions. The three-dimensional images, which are captured from each direction can be combined retrospectively to form one image, in which the data is weighted according to its resolution. The resolution of the combined image is then dominated by the lateral resolution of the individual images.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 19, 2009
    Publication date: September 10, 2009
    Applicant: EUROPAEISCHES Laboratorium fuer Molekularbiologie (EMBL)
    Inventors: Ernst H.K. Stelzer, Sebastian Enders, Jan Huisken, Steffen Lindek, James H. Swoger
  • Patent number: 7554725
    Abstract: The invention relates to a microscope, in which a layer of the sample is illuminated by a thin strip of light (11) and the sample is viewed (5) perpendicular to the plane of the strip of light. The depth of the strip of light (11) thus essentially determines the depth of focus of the system. To record the image, the object (4) is displaced through the strip of light (11), which remains fixed in relation to the detector (8), and fluorescent and/or diffused light is captured by a planar detector. Objects (4) that absorb or diffuse a large amount of light are viewed from several spatial directions. The three-dimensional images, which are captured from each direction can be combined retrospectively to form one image, in which the data is weighted according to its resolution. The resolution of the combined image is then dominated by the lateral resolution of the individual images.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 6, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 30, 2009
    Assignee: Europaeisches Laboratorium fuer Molekularbiologie (EMBL)
    Inventors: Ernst H. K. Stelzer, Sebastian Enders, Jan Huisken, Steffen Lindek, James H. Swoger