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Beam Shift matrix calibration » History » Revision 12

Revision 11 (Anchi Cheng, 05/15/2012 07:27 PM) → Revision 12/17 (Anchi Cheng, 06/06/2012 07:20 PM)

h1. Beam Shift matrix calibration (Optional) 

 h2. This calibration requires concentrating the beam on a small area of the sensor. Do not attempt this on radiation damage sensitive DDD 

 



 Beam shift matrix calibrations are used at each magnification that Leginon uses. These 
 calibrations are not absolutely necessary, but can be very helpful to center the beam in the 
 navigator node. In this case, *the image of a small beam within the CCD is treated as an object 
 in the image.* When the beam is shifted by the electromagnetic lenses of the microscope, the 
 imprint of the beam moves relative to the CCD. The 2x2 transformation matrix created then 
 relates the values sent to the microscope and the amount of "beam shift" movement seen on the 
 CCD imaging area. Only one set of measurement is sufficient for beam shift matrix 
 calibration. 




 [[Image Shift matrix calibration|How does matrix calibration work?]] 



 # Leginon/Presets Manager> Select a preset for the calibration and send its 
 parameter to the microscope. Matrix calibration depends only on magnification and 
 microscope high tension. Therefore, only one preset per combination needs to be 
 calibrated. 
   
 #    Scope> contract the beam sufficiently so that it remains in the area of CCD 
 acquisition during the calibration. It is also preferable that the CCD is imaging an 
 area with no distinct feature such as an empty grid square to minimize false peak from 
 unmoved object during a beam shift. At low magnifications, stage can be pulled out and 
 parked with a spacer to create the empty field. 
   
 #    Leginon/NodeSelector> select "Matrix" node. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix> the preset CCD configuration is almost certainly bad for imaging 
 contracted beam. Therefore, DO NOT use "test acquire" at this point. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix/Toolbar> open "settings" window by clicking the icon to select 
 camera configuration and correlation method. The former will take into effect only if 
 "Overwrite Preset" is checked. Click "OK" to save the settings and close the window when 
 done. 
   
 *Tip: 1024x1024 binned by 4 and a VERY short exposure time can save time but still 
 keep the contracted beam from burning the CCD. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix/Toolbar> left-click "Acquire Image" to obtain a test image with 
 current parameters. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix/Toolbar> select "beam shift" as the Parameter and open the 
 "Parameter Setting" window by clicking on the icon to the right of the selector. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix/Matrix Settings> "Average # position"=1 is sufficient. The rest 
 can be left in default values. "Interval" is not a relavent parameter since " average # 
 position"=1. 
   
 #    Leginon/Matrix/Toolbar> left-click (Execute icon) to calibrate. 
   
 #    The image of the beam should be shifting 10-30% of the imaging area. If this is not 
 the case, then adjust shift fraction so that this occurs. The images can be monitored in 
 Image Display Panel with display selection in image control panel set to "image". The 
 cross correlation and its peak can also be displayed. The beam need to be contained in 
 the imaging area at all time. 
   
 #    Use Navigation node to [[Checking Matrix and Modeled Stage Position Calibration|check the result of the calibration]]. 




 *Beam Shift Calibration Need for the Example MSI:* 


 |<filename>Preset</filename>|<filename>magnification</filename>| 
 |gr|120 (rarely used)| 
 |sq|550 (rarely used)| 
 |hl|5000 (seldom used)| 
 ||11000 (useful in beam shift alignment tool in Presets Manager to align the beam at 
 50000x)| 
 |fc,fa,en,ef|50000 (useful)| 




 *The Presets Manager beam shift alignment tool works best using ~5x lower magnification than the 
 preset meant to be aligned in order to see the whole beam in view. This means that for 
 fc,fa,en,ef that are at 50000x, a calibration at 11000x is required at the similar defocus 
 range. 

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 [[Image Shift matrix calibration|< Image Shift matrix calibration]] | [[Stage Position matrix calibration|Stage Position matrix calibration >]] 

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