Coded apertures with scatter and partial attenuation for high-energy high-resolution imaging

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Abstract

Laser-plasma x-ray sources have garnered interest from various communities due to their ability to generate high photon-energies from a small source size. The passive imaging of high energy x-rays and neutrons is also a useful diagnostic in laser-driven fusion capsules as well as laboratory astrophysics experiments which aim to study small samples of transient electron-positron plasmas. Here we study a coded aperture with scatter and partial attenuation included, which we call a 'CASPA', and compare them to the more common method of pinhole imaging. As well as discussing the well-known increased throughput of coded apertures, we also show that the decoding algorithm relaxes the need for a thick substrate. We simulate a 511 keV x-ray source through ray-tracing and Geant4 simulations to show how incomplete attenuation of the source by the mask may be less detrimental to imaging using a CASPA than to using a standard pinhole system.

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Selwood, M. P., Underwood, C. I. D., Heathcote, R., & Murphy, C. D. (2020). Coded apertures with scatter and partial attenuation for high-energy high-resolution imaging. Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, 62(7). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6587/ab8ca4

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