Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Phase Contrast and Differential Interference Contrast Microscopy01:26

Phase Contrast and Differential Interference Contrast Microscopy

Phase-Contrast Microscopes
In-phase-contrast microscopes, interference between light directly passing through a cell and light refracted by cellular components is used to create high-contrast, high-resolution images without staining. It is the oldest and simplest type of microscope that creates an image by altering the wavelengths of light rays passing through the specimen. Altered wavelength paths are created using an annular stop in the condenser. The annular stop produces a hollow cone of...
Imaging Biological Samples with Optical Microscopy01:18

Imaging Biological Samples with Optical Microscopy

Optical microscopy uses optic principles to provide detailed images of samples. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek designed the first compound optical microscope in the 17th century to visualize blood cells, bacteria, and yeast cells. In 1830, Joseph Jackson Lister created an essentially modern light microscope. The 20th century saw the development of microscopes with enhanced magnification and resolution.
In optical microscopy, the specimen to be viewed is placed on a glass slide and clipped on the stage...
Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy01:16

Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy

Confocal microscopy is an advanced microscopic technique. The prime advantage of the confocal microscope over other microscopy techniques is its ability to block the out-of-focus light from the illuminated samples using pinholes. It is widely used with fluorescence optics to obtain high-resolution, sharp contrast images. Unlike optical microscopes, confocal microscopes use a focused beam of light laser to scan the entire sample surface at different z-planes. These microscopes are, therefore,...
Interference and Diffraction02:18

Interference and Diffraction

Interference is a characteristic phenomenon exhibited by waves. When two electromagnetic waves interact with their peaks and troughs coinciding, a resulting wave with enhanced amplitude is produced. This is known as constructive interference. In this case, the two waves interacting are in phase with each other.
Masking and Demasking Agents01:19

Masking and Demasking Agents

EDTA titrations may necessitate masking and demasking agents to temporarily protect a particular metal ion in a mixture from the EDTA reaction. These agents facilitate the sequential analysis of the metal ions by forming stable complexes with some—but not all—metal ions during certain steps.
There are many masking agents, such as cyanide, fluoride, triethanolamine, thiourea, and 2,3-bis(sulfanyl)propan-1-ol (formerly 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanol), with the masking agent chosen based on the metal...
Deconvolution01:20

Deconvolution

Deconvolution, also known as inverse filtering, is the process of extracting the impulse response from known input and output signals. This technique is vital in scenarios where the system's characteristics are unknown, and they must be inferred from the observable signals.
Deconvolution involves several mathematical techniques to derive the impulse response. One common approach is polynomial division. In this method, the input and output sequences are treated as coefficients of...

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Untrained Position-Encoded Multilayer Perceptron Network for Structured Illumination Microscopy Reconstruction.

Chemical & biomedical imaging·2026
Same author

A Plasmon-Driven Transparent and Flexible Microsupercapacitor for Dual Solar-Hydrovoltaic Energy Harvesting.

Nano letters·2026
Same author

Compact and bench-top common-path interferometric biosensor utilizing guided mode resonance phase enhancement.

Optics letters·2025
Same author

Guided mode resonance-driven photoluminescence enhancement and angular emission control in a 2D dielectric photonic lattice.

Nanoscale·2025
Same author

Gross anatomy of the visual processing centers of Hieroglyphus banian.

Cell and tissue research·2025
Same author

Co-linear Hexa-Mirror-Based Multi-Periodic Structured Illumination Microscopy.

Nano letters·2025
Same journal

Multifunctional reconfigurable terahertz metasurface based on vanadium dioxide phase transition: achieving broadband absorption and efficient polarization conversion.

Applied optics·2026
Same journal

High-Q-factor electromagnetically induced transparency utilizing quasi-bound states in the continuum in an all-dielectric terahertz metasurface.

Applied optics·2026
Same journal

Automated stitching interferometry for high-precision metrology of X-ray mirrors.

Applied optics·2026
Same journal

Experimental demonstration of an approach to designing a metal-dielectric DBR resonant cavity structure.

Applied optics·2026
Same journal

High-precision wavefront reconstruction from a single-shot interferogram using a physics-driven hybrid feature calibration network.

Applied optics·2026
Same journal

Ultra-high-Q Fano resonance based on coupled topological corner states in Kagome photonic crystals.

Applied optics·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 2, 2026

Shaping the Amplitude and Phase of Laser Beams by Using a Phase-only Spatial Light Modulator
08:39

Shaping the Amplitude and Phase of Laser Beams by Using a Phase-only Spatial Light Modulator

Published on: January 28, 2019

Optical image encryption using a jigsaw transform for silhouette removal in interference-based methods and decryption

Pramod Kumar1, Joby Joseph, Kehar Singh

  • 1Physics Department, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, 110016 India. pramod_phz@rediffmail.com

Applied Optics
|May 3, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A novel jigsaw transformation (JT) method overcomes optical encryption

More Related Videos

A Guide to Structured Illumination TIRF Microscopy at High Speed with Multiple Colors
11:15

A Guide to Structured Illumination TIRF Microscopy at High Speed with Multiple Colors

Published on: May 30, 2016

Time Multiplexing Super Resolving Technique for Imaging from a Moving Platform
06:25

Time Multiplexing Super Resolving Technique for Imaging from a Moving Platform

Published on: February 12, 2014

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jun 2, 2026

Shaping the Amplitude and Phase of Laser Beams by Using a Phase-only Spatial Light Modulator
08:39

Shaping the Amplitude and Phase of Laser Beams by Using a Phase-only Spatial Light Modulator

Published on: January 28, 2019

A Guide to Structured Illumination TIRF Microscopy at High Speed with Multiple Colors
11:15

A Guide to Structured Illumination TIRF Microscopy at High Speed with Multiple Colors

Published on: May 30, 2016

Time Multiplexing Super Resolving Technique for Imaging from a Moving Platform
06:25

Time Multiplexing Super Resolving Technique for Imaging from a Moving Platform

Published on: February 12, 2014

Area of Science:

  • Optics and Photonics
  • Information Security
  • Image Processing

Background:

  • Interference-based optical encryption suffers from silhouette issues due to phase-only mask (POM) generation.
  • Previous solutions, like mask exchange, increased computational complexity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce a noniterative jigsaw transformation (JT) method for optical encryption.
  • To enhance security and simplify the decryption process.
  • To remove experimental alignment constraints.

Main Methods:

  • A single-step, noniterative jigsaw transformation (JT) was applied to phase-only masks (POMs).
  • The inverse JT and permutation keys were utilized for decryption.
  • A single spatial light modulator setup was employed to eliminate alignment issues.

Main Results:

  • The proposed JT method effectively eliminates the silhouette problem in optical encryption.
  • The method enhances security through the use of inverse JT and permutation keys.
  • Experimental validation confirmed successful decryption with the single spatial light modulator approach.

Conclusions:

  • The jigsaw transformation offers an efficient and secure solution for interference-based optical encryption.
  • This approach simplifies experimental setups and improves decryption security.
  • The method presents a significant advancement in optical data security.