| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4604996 | Applied and Computational Harmonic Analysis | 2015 | 23 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper considers the question of recovering the phase of an object from intensity-only measurements, a problem which naturally appears in X-ray crystallography and related disciplines. We study a physically realistic setup where one can modulate the signal of interest and then collect the intensity of its diffraction pattern, each modulation thereby producing a sort of coded diffraction pattern. We show that PhaseLift, a recent convex programming technique, recovers the phase information exactly from a number of random modulations, which is polylogarithmic in the number of unknowns. Numerical experiments with noiseless and noisy data complement our theoretical analysis and illustrate our approach.
Related Topics
												
													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Mathematics
													Analysis
												
											Authors
												Emmanuel J. Candès, Xiaodong Li, Mahdi Soltanolkotabi, 
											