Open Access Publications

The Institute's work is published in both traditional journals (e.g. the prestigious imaging journal IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging) and open access journals. For traditional journals, a preprint is uploaded to ArXiv whenever possible to make the research results freely available.

In addition, Tobias Knopp, as Editor-in-Chief, has founded a new scientific Open Access journal, which makes all articles available under the Creative Commons License (CC-BY-4.0). The International Journal on MagneticParticle Imaging (IJMPI) was founded in 2015 and publishes new research developments within the MPI community.

Open Access Publications

[191949]
Title: Artifact-suppressing reconstruction of strongly interacting objects in X-ray near-field holography without a spatial support constraint.
Written by: J. Dora, M. Möddel, S. Flenner, C. G. Schroer, T. Knopp, and J. Hagemann
in: <em>Optics Express</em>. Mar (2024).
Volume: <strong>32</strong>. Number: (7),
on pages: 10801-10828
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DOI: 10.1364/OE.514641
URL: https://opg.optica.org/oe/abstract.cfm?URI=oe-32-7-10801
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Note: article, openaccess

Abstract: The phase problem is a well known ill-posed reconstruction problem of coherent lens-less microscopic imaging, where only the squared magnitude of a complex wavefront is measured by a detector while the phase information of the wave field is lost. To retrieve the lost information, common algorithms rely either on multiple data acquisitions under varying measurement conditions or on the application of strong constraints such as a spatial support. In X-ray near-field holography, however, these methods are rendered impractical in the setting of time sensitive in situ and operando measurements. In this paper, we will forego the spatial support constraint and propose a projected gradient descent (PGD) based reconstruction scheme in combination with proper preprocessing and regularization that significantly reduces artifacts for refractive reconstructions from only a single acquired hologram without a spatial support constraint. We demonstrate the feasibility and robustness of our approach on different data sets obtained at the nano imaging endstation of P05 at PETRA III (DESY, Hamburg) operated by Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon.