Designs for a Quantum Electron Microscope
Pieter Kruit, Richard G. Hobbs, Chung-Soo Kim, Yujia Yang, Vitor R., Manfrinato, Jacob Hammer, Sebastian Thomas, Philipp Weber, Brannon Klopfer,, Christoph Kohstall, Thomas Juffmann, Mark A. Kasevich, Peter Hommelhoff and, Karl K. Berggren

TL;DR
This paper explores the concept and design considerations for a quantum electron microscope that uses quantum mechanics principles to reduce specimen damage and achieve atomic resolution, outlining potential system components and challenges.
Contribution
It introduces various design proposals for a quantum electron microscope utilizing interaction-free measurement techniques and identifies key technical challenges for future development.
Findings
Proposed multiple system designs based on different two-state-couplers.
Identified critical components like coherent beam splitters and resonators.
Outlined future challenges for electron optical design and theoretical interpretation.
Abstract
One of the astounding consequences of quantum mechanics is that it allows the detection of a target using an incident probe, with only a low probability of interaction of the probe and the target. This 'quantum weirdness' could be applied in the field of electron microscopy to generate images of beam-sensitive specimens with substantially reduced damage to the specimen. A reduction of beam-induced damage to specimens is especially of great importance if it can enable imaging of biological specimens with atomic resolution. Following a recent suggestion that interaction-free measurements are possible with electrons, we now analyze the difficulties of actually building an atomic resolution interaction-free electron microscope, or "quantum electron microscope". A quantum electron microscope would require a number of unique components not found in conventional transmission electron…
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