English

Fourier-transform Ghost Imaging with Hard X-rays

Optics 2016-09-14 v2

Abstract

Knowledge gained through X-ray crystallography fostered structural determination of materials and greatly facilitated the development of modern science and technology in the past century. Atomic details of sample structures is achievable by X-ray crystallography, however, it is only applied to crystalline structures. Imaging techniques based on X-ray coherent diffraction or zone plates are capable of resolving the internal structure of non-crystalline materials at nanoscales, but it is still a challenge to achieve atomic resolution. Here we demonstrate a novel lensless Fourier-transform ghost imaging method with pseudo-thermal hard X-rays by measuring the second-order intensity correlation function of the light. We show that high resolution Fourier-transform diffraction pattern of a complex amplitude sample can be achieved at Fresnel region and the amplitude and phase distributions of a sample in spatial domain can be retrieved successfully. The method of lensless X-ray Fourier-transform ghost imaging extends X-ray crystallography to non-crystalline samples, and its spatial resolution is limited only by the wavelength of the X-ray, thus atomic resolution should be routinely obtainable. Since highly coherent X-ray source is not required, comparing to conventional X-ray coherent diffraction imaging, the method can be implemented with laboratory X-ray sources, and it also provides a potential solution for lensless diffraction imaging with fermions, such as neutron and electron where the intensive coherent source usually is not available.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1603.04388,
  title  = {Fourier-transform Ghost Imaging with Hard X-rays},
  author = {Hong Yu and Ronghua Lu and Shensheng Han and Honglan Xie and Guohao Du and Tiqiao Xiao and Daming Zhu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1603.04388},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

9 pages, 4 figures, typos fixed, author affiliations added

R2 v1 2026-06-22T13:10:31.107Z