Ptychography (ptycho)

Ptychography is a scanning x-ray microscopy method with coherent illumination. The word ptychography was derived from the Greek words ptyché (πτυχή = fold) and gráphein (γράφειν = to write). It is an imaging technique consisting of an acquisition setup and a data inversion step. In this technique, the sample is scanned with a focused coherent x-ray beam. However, at each position of the scan, a two-dimensional diffraction pattern is recorded in the far field regime. Using a numerical reconstruction algorithm, both the object's complex transmissions function and the complex illuminating wavefield can be reconstructed from the series of diffraction patterns. A set of diffracted images is measured by illuminating the object of interest at different positions. The object is translated in a 2D plane. The 4D acquired data (each 2D position is an image) is computed with a so-called inversion algorithm to form an image of the studied object. This modality has the advantage of not depending on a good quality lens, as it does not require any.

Resource used

DESY on Ptychography

Links

Ptychography 4.0

DATA OUTPUT
image
MEASURED QUANTITY
electromagnetic wave, diffration pattern
WAVE
coherent wave, transverse wave

Ptychography Image


Helmholtz Imaging spinning wheel

Please wait, your data is processed