Hard X-ray imaging of bacterial cells: nano-diffraction and ptychographic reconstruction
Author(s) -
Robin N. Wilke,
M. Priebe,
M. Bartels,
Klaus Giewekemeyer,
Ana Díaz,
Petri Karvinen,
Tim Salditt
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.20.019232
Subject(s) - optics , ptychography , reciprocal lattice , zone plate , diffraction , coherent diffraction imaging , fresnel diffraction , resolution (logic) , fresnel zone , materials science , scattering , physics , lens (geology) , image resolution , fresnel lens , x ray , tomography , phase retrieval , fourier transform , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , computer science
Ptychographic coherent X-ray diffractive imaging (PCDI) has been combined with nano-focus X-ray diffraction to study the structure and density distribution of unstained and unsliced bacterial cells, using a hard X-ray beam of 6.2keV photon energy, focused to about 90nm by a Fresnel zone plate lens. While PCDI provides images of the bacteria with quantitative contrast in real space with a resolution well below the beam size at the sample, spatially resolved small angle X-ray scattering using the same Fresnel zone plate (cellular nano-diffraction) provides structural information at highest resolution in reciprocal space up to 2nm(-1). We show how the real and reciprocal space approach can be used synergistically on the same sample and with the same setup. In addition, we present 3D hard X-ray imaging of unstained bacterial cells by a combination of ptychography and tomography.
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