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Coherent Diffractive Imaging Using Randomly Coded Masks

Optics 2016-01-20 v1

Abstract

Coherent diffractive imaging (CDI) provides new opportunities for high resolution X-ray imaging with simultaneous amplitude and phase contrast. Extensions to CDI broaden the scope of the technique for use in a wide variety of experimental geometries and physical systems. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a new extension to CDI that encodes additional information through the use of a series of randomly coded masks. The information gained from the few additional diffraction measurements removes the need for typical object-domain constraints; the algorithm uses prior information about the masks instead. The experiment is performed using a laser diode at 532.2 nm, enabling rapid prototyping for future X-ray synchrotron and even free electron laser experiments. Diffraction patterns are collected with up to 15 different masks placed between a CCD detector and a single sample. Phase retrieval is performed using a convex relaxation routine known as "PhaseCut" followed by a variation on Fienup's input-output algorithm. The reconstruction quality is judged via calculation of phase retrieval transfer functions as well as by an object-space comparison between reconstructions and a lens-based image of the sample. The results of this analysis indicate that with enough masks (in this case 3 or 4) the diffraction phases converge reliably, implying stability and uniqueness of the retrieved solution.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1509.03229,
  title  = {Coherent Diffractive Imaging Using Randomly Coded Masks},
  author = {Matthew H. Seaberg and Alexandre d'Aspremont and Joshua J. Turner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.03229},
  year   = {2016}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:53:53.947Z