English

Plenoptic x-ray microscopy

Optics 2020-01-29 v1 Applied Physics

Abstract

Plenoptic cameras use arrays of micro-lenses to capture multiple views of the same scene in a single compound image. They enable refocusing on different planes and depth estimation. However, until now, all types of plenoptic computational imaging have been limited to visible light. We demonstrate an x-ray plenoptic microscope that uses a concentrating micro-capillary array instead of a micro-lens array and can simultaneously acquire from one hundred to one thousand x-ray projections of imaged volumes that are located in the focal spot region of the micro-capillary array. Hence, tomographic slices at various depths near the focal plane can be reconstructed in a way similar to tomosynthesis, but from a single x-ray exposure. The microscope enables depth-resolved imaging of small subvolumes in large samples and can be used for imaging of weakly absorbing artificial and biological objects by means of propagation phase-contrast.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1912.11897,
  title  = {Plenoptic x-ray microscopy},
  author = {K. M. Sowa and M. P. Kujda and P. Korecki},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.11897},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

The following article has been accepted by Applied Physics Letters

R2 v1 2026-06-23T12:56:52.680Z