CHIMIA (Oct 1997)
Optical Microscopy in the Nano-World
- Dieter W. Pohl,
- Bettina Nechay,
- Lukas Novotny,
- Michael Pfeiffer,
- Claude Philipona,
- Taras Plakhotnik,
- Alois Renn,
- Abdeljalil Sayah,
- Joao-Manuel Segura,
- Beate Sick,
- Uwe Siegner,
- Guido Tarrach,
- Rüdiger Vahldieck,
- Urs P. Wild,
- Dieter Zeisel,
- Alfred J. Meixner,
- Olivier J.F. Martin,
- Fabienne Marquis-Weible,
- Hermann Bach,
- Martin A. Bopp,
- Volker Deckert,
- Pierre Descouts,
- Rolf Eckert,
- Hans-Joachim Güntherodt,
- Christian Hafner,
- Bert Hecht,
- Harry Heinzelmann,
- Thomas Huser,
- Mark Jobin,
- Ursula Keller,
- Thilo Lacoste,
- Patrick Lambelet,
- Renato Zenobi
Affiliations
- Dieter W. Pohl
- Bettina Nechay
- Lukas Novotny
- Michael Pfeiffer
- Claude Philipona
- Taras Plakhotnik
- Alois Renn
- Abdeljalil Sayah
- Joao-Manuel Segura
- Beate Sick
- Uwe Siegner
- Guido Tarrach
- Rüdiger Vahldieck
- Urs P. Wild
- Dieter Zeisel
- Alfred J. Meixner
- Olivier J.F. Martin
- Fabienne Marquis-Weible
- Hermann Bach
- Martin A. Bopp
- Volker Deckert
- Pierre Descouts
- Rolf Eckert
- Hans-Joachim Güntherodt
- Christian Hafner
- Bert Hecht
- Harry Heinzelmann
- Thomas Huser
- Mark Jobin
- Ursula Keller
- Thilo Lacoste
- Patrick Lambelet
- Renato Zenobi
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 51,
no. 10
Abstract
Scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM) is an optical microscopy whose resolution is not bound to the diffraction limit. It provides chemical information based upon spectral, polarization and/or fluorescence contrast images. Details as small as 20 nm can be recognized. Photophysical and photochemical effects can be studied with SNOM on a similar scale. This article reviews a good deal of the experimental and theoretical work on SNOM in Switzerland.