Planar Lightsheet Optical Tweezer (pLOT) - A new tool for scientific discovery

The planar lightsheet optical tweezer (pLOT) holds the key to new kinds of experiments that are constrained to two dimensions (2D). This paves the way for optical trapping, manipulation, and imaging of live objects, and may helps unlock new quantum interactions (atomic physics).
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks
Planar Lightsheet Optical Tweezer 

Being able to trap objects (both living and non-living) in a selective plane is fascinating and introduces new capabilities. This allows new ways to manipulate objects that are confined to a plane or have two degrees of freedom. Planar Lightsheet Optical Tweezer (pLOT) significantly differs from traditional optical tweezers, which are inherently point traps at their core.

The development reported in Comm Biol is a new technique that traps dielectric beads and cells in a plane illuminated by a sheet of light. Technically, this means the trap laser selectively traps objects in a desired plane, confining them to 2D. This is incredible in application, requiring investigation of objects in a selective single layer, i.e, 2D physics / biology. Fields benefiting from this technique encompass the entire natural and engineering sciences. Some of the futuristic possibilities include a single nano-layer deposition in nanotechnology, atom-atom interaction in atomic physics, quantum interaction between multiple objects, single-layer cell patterning in bioengineering, cell-cell interaction in disease biology, including Cancer, super-resolution imaging of live cells / organisms in a free environment, and many more. The future is likely to see many such applications that are inherently planar in nature.

The newly developed optical tool (pLOT) is likely to create conditions restricted to two dimensions, facilitating new kinds of experiments that would otherwise be impossible.

Full Report: https://www.nature.com/articles/s42003-025-09147-9 

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Nanobiotechnology
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Biotechnology > Nanobiotechnology
Quantum Physics
Physical Sciences > Physics and Astronomy > Quantum Physics
Cell Biology
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Cell Biology
Optical Microscopy
Physical Sciences > Physics and Astronomy > Optics and Photonics > Optical Microscopy
Biological Imaging
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Biological Techniques > Biological Imaging

Ask the Editor – Space Physics, Quantum Physics, Atomic, Molecular and Chemical Physics

Got a question for the editor about Space Physics, Quantum Physics, Atomic, Molecular and Chemical Physics? Ask it here!

Continue reading announcement