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Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material

Light interacts with an organism's integument on a variety of spatial scales. For example in an iridescent bird: nano-scale structures produce color; the milli-scale structure of barbs and barbules largely determines the directional pattern of reflected light; and through the macro-scale spatia...

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Autores principales: Harvey, Todd Alan, Bostwick, Kimberly S., Marschner, Steve
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MyJove Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23712059
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50254
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author Harvey, Todd Alan
Bostwick, Kimberly S.
Marschner, Steve
author_facet Harvey, Todd Alan
Bostwick, Kimberly S.
Marschner, Steve
author_sort Harvey, Todd Alan
collection PubMed
description Light interacts with an organism's integument on a variety of spatial scales. For example in an iridescent bird: nano-scale structures produce color; the milli-scale structure of barbs and barbules largely determines the directional pattern of reflected light; and through the macro-scale spatial structure of overlapping, curved feathers, these directional effects create the visual texture. Milli-scale and macro-scale effects determine where on the organism's body, and from what viewpoints and under what illumination, the iridescent colors are seen. Thus, the highly directional flash of brilliant color from the iridescent throat of a hummingbird is inadequately explained by its nano-scale structure alone and questions remain. From a given observation point, which milli-scale elements of the feather are oriented to reflect strongly? Do some species produce broader "windows" for observation of iridescence than others? These and similar questions may be asked about any organisms that have evolved a particular surface appearance for signaling, camouflage, or other reasons. In order to study the directional patterns of light scattering from feathers, and their relationship to the bird's milli-scale morphology, we developed a protocol for measuring light scattered from biological materials using many high-resolution photographs taken with varying illumination and viewing directions. Since we measure scattered light as a function of direction, we can observe the characteristic features in the directional distribution of light scattered from that particular feather, and because barbs and barbules are resolved in our images, we can clearly attribute the directional features to these different milli-scale structures. Keeping the specimen intact preserves the gross-scale scattering behavior seen in nature. The method described here presents a generalized protocol for analyzing spatially- and directionally-varying light scattering from complex biological materials at multiple structural scales.
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spelling pubmed-37073292013-07-16 Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material Harvey, Todd Alan Bostwick, Kimberly S. Marschner, Steve J Vis Exp Biophysics Light interacts with an organism's integument on a variety of spatial scales. For example in an iridescent bird: nano-scale structures produce color; the milli-scale structure of barbs and barbules largely determines the directional pattern of reflected light; and through the macro-scale spatial structure of overlapping, curved feathers, these directional effects create the visual texture. Milli-scale and macro-scale effects determine where on the organism's body, and from what viewpoints and under what illumination, the iridescent colors are seen. Thus, the highly directional flash of brilliant color from the iridescent throat of a hummingbird is inadequately explained by its nano-scale structure alone and questions remain. From a given observation point, which milli-scale elements of the feather are oriented to reflect strongly? Do some species produce broader "windows" for observation of iridescence than others? These and similar questions may be asked about any organisms that have evolved a particular surface appearance for signaling, camouflage, or other reasons. In order to study the directional patterns of light scattering from feathers, and their relationship to the bird's milli-scale morphology, we developed a protocol for measuring light scattered from biological materials using many high-resolution photographs taken with varying illumination and viewing directions. Since we measure scattered light as a function of direction, we can observe the characteristic features in the directional distribution of light scattered from that particular feather, and because barbs and barbules are resolved in our images, we can clearly attribute the directional features to these different milli-scale structures. Keeping the specimen intact preserves the gross-scale scattering behavior seen in nature. The method described here presents a generalized protocol for analyzing spatially- and directionally-varying light scattering from complex biological materials at multiple structural scales. MyJove Corporation 2013-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3707329/ /pubmed/23712059 http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50254 Text en Copyright © 2013, Journal of Visualized Experiments http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visithttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Biophysics
Harvey, Todd Alan
Bostwick, Kimberly S.
Marschner, Steve
Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title_full Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title_fullStr Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title_short Measuring Spatially- and Directionally-varying Light Scattering from Biological Material
title_sort measuring spatially- and directionally-varying light scattering from biological material
topic Biophysics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23712059
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50254
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