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Revisiting Bragg's X-ray Microscope: Scatter Based Optical Transient Grating Detection of Pulsed Ionising Radiation

Overview
Journal Ultramicroscopy
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Radiology
Date 2010 Dec 24
PMID 21177037
Citations 1
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Abstract

Transient optical gratings for detecting ultrafast signals are routine for temporally resolved photochemical investigations. Many processes can contribute to the formation of such gratings; we indicate use of optically scattering centres that can be formed with highly variable latencies in different materials and devices using ionising radiation. Coherent light scattered by these centres can form the short-wavelength-to-optical-wavelength, incoherent-to-coherent basis of a Bragg X-ray microscope, with inherent scope for optical phasing. Depending on the dynamics of the medium chosen, the way is open to both ultrafast pulsed and integrating measurements. For experiments employing brief pulses, we discuss high-dynamic-range short-wavelength diffraction measurements with real-time optical reconstructions. Applications to optical real-time X-ray phase-retrieval are considered.

Citing Articles

Beating Darwin-Bragg losses in lab-based ultrafast x-ray experiments.

Fullagar W, Uhlig J, Mandal U, Kurunthu D, El Nahhas A, Tatsuno H Struct Dyn. 2017; 4(4):044011.

PMID: 28396880 PMC: 5367090. DOI: 10.1063/1.4978742.