Abstract
Lensless imaging is a high potential and currently intensely targeted research goal, in view of those fields of applications for which aberration- free high-resolution lenses are not available, for example for x-ray imaging. A recently proposed (direct inversion) variant of lensless imaging combines the advantages of two classical routes toward lensless imaging, the high-resolution characteristics of iterative object reconstruction, and the direct and deterministic nature of holographic reconstruction. Here, we use a simple standard optical setup using visible wavelength, a lithographic test object and a phase-shifting reference object to demonstrate the approach. Importantly, we show that a phase- shifting reference object, instead of the absorption mask proposed earlier, is sufficient for object reconstruction. This is relevant in view of the much easier implementation in future x-ray applications. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Enders, B., Giewekemeyer, K., Kurz, T., Podorov, S., & Salditt, T. (2009). Non-iterative coherent diffractive imaging using a phase-shifting reference frame. New Journal of Physics, 11. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/11/4/043021
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