General approaches for shear-correcting coordinate transformations in Bragg coherent diffraction imaging: Part 1
Siddharth Maddali, Peng Li, Anastasios Pateras, Daniel Timbie, and Nazar Delegan, Alex Crook, Hope Lee, Irene Calvo-Almazan and, Dina Sheyfer, Wonsuk Cha, F. Joseph Heremans, David D. Awschalom and, Virginie Chamard, Marc Allain, Stephan O.Hruszkewycz

TL;DR
This paper develops a generalized theoretical framework for correcting shear distortions in 3D images obtained from Bragg coherent diffraction imaging, enabling more accurate material characterization.
Contribution
It introduces a coordinate transformation method to correct shear distortions post phase retrieval in BCDI, generalizing existing geometric theories.
Findings
Derived a general real-space coordinate transformation for shear correction.
Provided a theoretical basis for shear distortion mitigation in BCDI.
Enhanced the accuracy of 3D crystalline material imaging.
Abstract
In this two-part article series we provide a generalized description of the scattering geometry of Bragg coherent diffraction imaging (BCDI) experiments, the shear distortion effects inherent to the resulting three-dimensional (3D) image from current phase retrieval methods and strategies to mitigate this distortion. In this Part I, we derive in general terms the real-space coordinate transformation to correct this shear, which originates in the more fundamental relationship between the representations of mutually conjugate 3D spaces. Such a transformation, applied as a final post-processing step following phase retrieval, is crucial for arriving at an un-distorted and physically meaningful image of the 3D scatterer. As the relevance of BCDI grows in the field of materials characterization, we take this opportunity to generalize the available sparse literature that addresses the…
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