When holography meets coherent diffraction imaging
Tatiana Latychevskaia, Jean-Nicolas Longchamp, Hans-Werner Fink

TL;DR
This paper introduces holographic coherent diffraction imaging (HCDI), a novel technique that combines holography and CDI to improve phase retrieval and resolution in molecular imaging using coherent X-ray sources.
Contribution
The authors present a new method, HCDI, merging holography and CDI, enabling faster, unambiguous phase recovery and relaxed oversampling requirements in molecular imaging.
Findings
HCDI provides direct phase information from holograms.
The technique relaxes the oversampling condition in CDI.
HCDI achieves high-resolution imaging with improved phase retrieval.
Abstract
Modern imaging techniques at the molecular scale rely on utilizing novel coherent light sources like X-ray free electron lasers for the ultimate goal of visualizing such objects as individual biomolecules rather than crystals. Here, unlike in the case of crystals where structures can be solved by model building and phase refinement, the phase distribution of the wave scattered by an individual molecule must directly be recovered. There are two well-known solutions to the phase problem: holography and coherent diffraction imaging (CDI). Both techniques have their pros and cons. In holography, the reconstruction of the scattered complex-valued object wave is directly provided by a well-defined reference wave that must cover the entire detector area which often is an experimental challenge. CDI provides the highest possible, only wavelength limited, resolution, but the phase recovery is an…
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