Quantum Imaging with X-rays
Justin C. Goodrich, Ryan Mahon, Joseph Hanrahan, Dennis Bollweg,, Monika Dziubelski, Raphael A. Abrahao, Sanjit Karmakar, Kazimierz J. Gofron,, Thomas A. Caswell, Daniel Allan, Lonny Berman, Andrei Nomerotski, Andrei, Fluerasu, Cinzia DaVia, Sean McSweeney

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates high-rate correlated X-ray photon pair generation and quantum correlation imaging, including biological samples, marking a significant advancement in X-ray quantum imaging technology.
Contribution
It reports the first high-rate production of correlated X-ray photon pairs and their application in quantum imaging, overcoming previous detection and generation challenges.
Findings
Record high rate of 6,300 photon pairs per hour
Successful quantum correlation imaging of biological samples
Observation of energy anti-correlation in X-ray photon pairs
Abstract
Quantum imaging encompasses a broad range of methods that exploit the quantum properties of light to capture information about an object. One such approach involves using a two-photon quantum state, where only one photon interacts with the object being imaged while its entangled partner carries spatial or temporal information. To implement this technique, it is necessary to generate specific quantum states of light and detect photons at the single-photon level. While this method has been successfully demonstrated in the visible electromagnetic spectrum, extending it to X-rays has faced significant challenges due to the difficulties in producing a sufficient rate of X-ray photon pairs and detecting them with adequate resolution. Here, we demonstrate record high rates of correlated X-ray photon pairs produced via a spontaneous parametric down-conversion process and we employ these photons…
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