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X-ray Camera Has Image Stabilizer

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Making a firm connection between an x-ray lens and the nanoscale object to be imaged improves the imaging of low-contrast or moving nano-objects and could lead to new insights into dynamic nanoscale processes, such as the fastest magnetic switching in data storage, says a team in Germany. The efficiency of the new Fourier transform holography method is based on an x-ray focusing optic being firmly fixed to the object to be imaged using a Fresnel zone plate. While this approach initially provides a blurry picture, the focus can be refined afterward using computer software. The rigid...Read full article

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    Published: January 2014
    Glossary
    fourier transform
    Any of the various methods of decomposing a signal into a set of coefficients of orthogonal waveforms (trigonometric functions).
    fresnel zone plate
    A zone plate in which the zones are alternately transparent and opaque to specific radiation, and coarse enough so that no appreciable diffraction or focusing takes place. The Fresnel zone plate is frequently used as a coded aperture.
    holography
    Holography is a technique used to capture and reconstruct three-dimensional images using the principles of interference and diffraction of light. Unlike conventional photography, which records only the intensity of light, holography records both the intensity and phase information of light waves scattered from an object. This allows the faithful reproduction of the object's three-dimensional structure, including its depth, shape, and texture. The process of holography typically involves the...
    jitter
    1. In relation to cathode-ray tube displays, errors in the signal's amplitude, phase or both that result in small, rapid aberrations in size or position of the image. 2. Errors of synchronization between a facsimile's transmitter and receiver that are characterized by a raggedness in the copy. 3. Small spurious variations in a waveform, such as in pulse repetition rate, amplitude, frequency or phase, that stem from supply-voltage variations, mechanical instability and other factors.
    nano
    An SI prefix meaning one billionth (10-9). Nano can also be used to indicate the study of atoms, molecules and other structures and particles on the nanometer scale. Nano-optics (also referred to as nanophotonics), for example, is the study of how light and light-matter interactions behave on the nanometer scale. See nanophotonics.
    nanometer
    A unit of length in the metric system equal to 10-9 meters. It formerly was called a millimicron.
    spatial resolution
    Spatial resolution refers to the level of detail or granularity in an image or a spatial dataset. It is a measure of the smallest discernible or resolvable features in the spatial domain, typically expressed as the distance between two adjacent pixels or data points. In various contexts, spatial resolution can have slightly different meanings: Imaging and remote sensing: In the context of satellite imagery, aerial photography, or other imaging technologies, spatial resolution refers to the...
    BESSY IIcamerasEuropeFourier transformFresnel zone plateGermanyholographyHZBimage stabilizerImagingJan GeilhufejitterlenseslizardnanonanometerOpticsResearch & TechnologySiemens starspatial resolutionStefan EisebittTech PulseTUBx-ray camera

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