The Talbot effect is the self-imaging, at distances D multiple of D R, of the intensity downstream of a periodic object. Earlier work with hard synchrotron radiation X-rays showed the variation with D of the fundamental Fourier component of intensity to be a good measurement of beam coherence. Any higher-order Fourier coefficients Ĩ(D, m > 1) would be periodic with a reduced period DRm = DR/m for an ideally coherent incident beam (partial Talbot effect). The degree of coherence γ(x) is sampled through the ratio of Ĩ(D, m) at D = 0 and multiples of DRm. This requires the Fourier coefficient for D = 0, which is not accessible for a phase object (no contrast at D = 0). However, the ratio of the slopes of Ĩ(D, m) at D = 0 and D = pDRm also provides this information. Furthermore, a characterization of γ(x) is possible, provided an assumption is made on its shape, using only the ratio of the Fourier coefficient Ĩ(D, m) of two images a distance pDRm apart. Experiments with one- and two-dimensional phase gratings and a mixed (amplitude and phase) two-dimensional grating confirm that the partial Talbot effect approach is viable. It requires a reduced range of distances, and yields important results directly, obviating the need for computer fits. In particular, 8% of the beam intensity was found to have very low coherence in the vertical direction, probably due to monochromator imperfection.
CITATION STYLE
Guigay, J. P., Zabler, S., Cloetens, P., David, C., Mokso, R., & Schlenker, M. (2004). The partial Talbot effect and its use in measuring the coherence of synchrotron X-rays. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation, 11(6), 476–482. https://doi.org/10.1107/S0909049504024811
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