Single-shot X-ray ptychography as a structured illumination method
Abstract
Single-shot ptychography is a quantitative phase imaging method wherein overlapping beams of light arranged in a grid pattern simultaneously illuminate a sample, allowing a full ptychographic dataset to be collected in a single shot. It is primarily used at optical wavelengths, but there is interest in using it for X-ray imaging. However, the constraints imposed by X-ray optics have limited the resolution achievable to date. In this work, we reinterpret single-shot ptychography as a structured illumination method by viewing the grid of beams as a single, highly structured illumination function. Pre-calibrating this illumination and reconstructing single-shot data using the randomized probe imaging algorithm allows us to account for the overlap and coherent interference between the diffraction arising from each beam. We achieve a resolution 3.5 times finer than the numerical aperture-based limit imposed by traditional algorithms for single-shot ptychography. We argue that this reconstruction method will work better for most single-shot ptychography experiments and discuss the implications for the design of future single-shot X-ray microscopes.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2410.19197,
title = {Single-shot X-ray ptychography as a structured illumination method},
author = {Abraham Levitan and Klaus Wakonig and Zirui Gao and Adam Kubec and Bing Kuan Chen and Oren Cohen and Manuel Guizar-Sicairos},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.19197},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
4 pages, 3 figures