Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1542289 | Optics Communications | 2006 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
A theoretical framework is presented to treat both imaging and diffraction experiments performed with point-focus and line-focus X-ray sources, with particular emphasis on two-dimensional and planar X-ray waveguides. In particular, point-projection and line-projection microscopy has been approached within the Huygens-Fresnel formalism; point-projection and line-projection diffraction, such as spatially-resolved Bragg/Laue diffraction of crystalline samples in a regime of dynamical scattering, has been treated both by means of the Huygens-Fresnel formalism and of the Takagi-Taupin dynamical theory. Both in point- and line- projection geometry, simply rotating the investigated crystalline samples, it is possible to switch from Fresnel self-imaging to Bragg/Laue diffraction conditions. This means to image, within the same experiment, either morphological features, with a sub-micrometric resolution, out of the exact diffraction condition, or the structure order on an atomic scale if placing the sample in diffraction.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Authors
Liberato De Caro, Cinzia Giannini, Alessia Cedola, Stefano Lagomarsino, Inna Bukreeva,