The projection approximation and edge contrast for x-ray propagation-based phase contrast imaging of a cylindrical edge
Source: Opt. Express 18, 9865 (2010); doi:10.1364/OE.18.009865
Issue Date: 15 August 2010
PACS
- 42.25.Fx
Optical diffraction and scattering - 42.30.-d
Imaging and optical processing - 07.85.-m
X- and γ-ray instruments - 87.57.-s
Medical imaging - 87.85.Pq
Biomedical imaging - 42.25.-p
Wave optics - 41.50.+h
X-ray beam source magnets and X-ray optics for control of particle beams - 42.15.Eq
Optical system design - 42.86.+b
Optical workshop techniques - 42.79.-e
Optical elements, devices, and systems - 85.60.-q
Optoelectronic devices - YEAR: 2010
PUBLICATION DATA
We examine the projection approximation in the context of propagation-based phase contrast imaging using hard x-rays. Specifically, we consider the case of a cylinder or a rounded edge, as a simple model for the edges of many biological samples. The Argand-plane signature of a propagation-based phase contrast fringe from the edge of a cylinder is studied, and the evolution of this signature with propagation. This, along with experimental images obtained using a synchrotron source, reveals how propagation within the scattering volume is not fully described in the projection approximation's ray-based approach. This means that phase contrast fringes are underestimated by the projection approximation at a short object-to-detector propagation distance, namely a distance comparable to the free-space propagation within the volume. This failure of the projection approximation may become non-negligible in the detailed study of small anatomical features deep within a large body. Nevertheless, the projection approximation matches the exact solution for a larger propagation distance typical of those used in biomedical phase contrast imaging.
©2010 Optical Society of America
(As supplied by publisher.)
| Permalink: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.18.009865 |
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