Aberration corrected Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) images can currently resolve information at significantly better than 0.1 nm. Aberration corrected imaging conditions seek to optimize the transfer of high-resolution information but in doing so they prevent the transfer of low spatial frequency information. To recover low spatial frequency information, aberration corrected images must be acquired at a large defocus which compromises high spatial frequency information transfer. In this paper we present two a posteriori solutions to this problem in which the information bandwidth in an exit wave reconstruction is increased. In the first we reconstruct the electron exit wavefunction from two focal series datasets, with different, uniform focal steps, experimentally demonstrating that the width of the transfer interval can be extended from 0.2 nm⁻¹ (∼5 nm) to better than 10 nm⁻¹ (0.1 nm). In the second we outline the use of a focal series recorded with a non-uniform focal step to recover a wider range of spatial frequencies without the need for a large number of images. Using simulated data we show that using this non-uniform focal step the spatial frequency interval for a five image data set may be increased to between 0.25 nm⁻¹ (4 nm) and 8.3 nm⁻¹ (0.12 nm) compared to between 0.74 nm⁻¹ (1.4 nm) and 8.3 nm⁻¹ (0.12 nm) for the standard focal series geometry.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultramic.2013.04.012 | DOI Listing |
Sleep Epidemiol
December 2024
Socio-Spatial Determinants of Health (SSDH) Laboratory, Population and Community Health Sciences Branch, Division of Intramural Research, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Introduction: Research suggests that perceived neighborhood social environments (PNSE) may contribute to gender and race/ethnicity-based sleep disparities. Our study aimed to examine associations between PNSE factors and adolescents' sleep patterns. As a secondary aim, we examined how gender and race/ethnic groups might moderate these associations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To propose a domain-conditioned and temporal-guided diffusion modeling method, termed dynamic Diffusion Modeling (dDiMo), for accelerated dynamic MRI reconstruction, enabling diffusion process to characterize spatiotemporal information for time-resolved multi-coil Cartesian and non-Cartesian data.
Methods: The dDiMo framework integrates temporal information from time-resolved dimensions, allowing for the concurrent capture of intra-frame spatial features and inter-frame temporal dynamics in diffusion modeling. It employs additional spatiotemporal ($x$-$t$) and self-consistent frequency-temporal ($k$-$t$) priors to guide the diffusion process.
In the realm of 3D measurement, photometric stereo excels in capturing high-frequency details but suffers from accumulated errors that lead to low-frequency distortions in the reconstructed surface. Conversely, light field (LF) reconstruction provides satisfactory low-frequency geometry but sacrifices spatial resolution, impacting high-frequency detail quality. To tackle these challenges, we propose a photometric stereoscopic light field measurement (PSLFM) scheme that harnesses the strengths of both methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Goos-Hänchen and Imbert-Fedorov shifts are significant wave phenomena, yet the underlying mechanism governing the spatiotemporal vortex pulses reflected and refracted on graphene remains opaque. In this study, we analytically derive the expressions for the centroid shifts of spatiotemporal vortex pulses by applying the Fresnel-Snell formulas to each plane wave in the incident spatiotemporal vortex pulse spectrum. We demonstrate that the longitudinal shifts are correlated with the angular shifts, and thus, both are subject to resonant enhancement in the vicinity of the Brewster angle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe developed a scanning dual-comb spectroscopic microscopy (S-DCSM) system to acquire multidimensional optical information of transparent or semi-transparent samples. The system demonstrated the capability to perform spectral imaging of absorbance, optical phase, optical thickness, linear dichroism, and birefringence within the spectral range covered by optical frequency combs (OFCs). The spatial distribution of optical thickness in HeLa cells was measured as 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!