U. Dürig, O. Züger, et al.
Journal of Microscopy
Light emitted from the aperture of a near-field optical probe in the close vicinity of a dielectric object propagates in classically "forbidden" as well as "allowed" directions; the two zones are separated by the critical angle for total internal reflection. The new "tunnel" near-field optical microscopy (TNOM) technique makes use of forbidden and allowed radiation, in contrast to standard scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM or NSOM), which records only the allowed light. Scan images obtained with allowed and forbidden light are complementary to some extent; the latter, however, provide high contrast and resolution even in situations in which standard SNOM/NSOM shows little or no contrast. The influence of topography on image formation is analyzed and discussed. © 1995.
U. Dürig, O. Züger, et al.
Journal of Microscopy
L. Novotny, D. Pohl, et al.
Optics Letters
H. Heinzelmann, Th. Lacoste, et al.
Thin Solid Films
D. Pohl, U.Ch. Fischer, et al.
Journal of Microscopy