Abstract:We investigate the problem of 3D complex field reconstruction corresponding to unstained red blood cells (RBCs) with a single defocused off-axis digital hologram. We employ recently introduced mean gradient descent (MGD) optimization framework, to solve the 3D recovery problem. While investigating volume recovery problem for a continuous phase object like RBC, we came across an interesting feature of the back-propagated field that it does not show clear focusing effect. Therefore the sparsity enforcement within the iterative optimization framework given the single hologram data cannot effectively restrict the true object volume. For phase objects, it is known that the amplitude contrast of the back-propagated object field at the focus plane is minimum and it increases at the defocus planes. We therefore use this information available in the detector field data to device weights as a function of inverse of amplitude contrast. This weight function is employed in the iterative steps of the optimization algorithm to assist the object volume localization. The experimental illustrations of 3D volume reconstruction of the healthy as well as the malaria infected RBCs are presented. The proposed methodology is simple to implement experimentally and provides an approximate tomographic solution which is axially restricted and is consistent with the object field data.
Abstract:Reconstruction of a stable and reliable solution from noisy incomplete Fourier intensity data recorded in a coherent X-ray imaging (CXI) experiment is a challenging problem. The Relaxed Averaged Alternating Reflections (RAAR) algorithm that is concluded with a number of Error Reduction (ER) iterations is a popular choice. The RAAR-ER algorithm is usually employed for several hundreds of times starting with independent random guesses to obtain trial solutions that are then averaged to obtain the phase retrieval transfer function (PRTF). In this paper, we examine the phase retrieval solution obtained using the RAAR-ER methodology from perspective of the complexity parameter that was introduced by us in recent works. We observe that a single run of the RAAR-ER algorithm produces a solution with higher complexity compared to what is expected based on the complexity parameter as manifested by spurious high frequency grainy artifacts in the solution that do not seem to go away completely even after a number of trial solutions are averaged. We then describe a CG-RAAR (Complexity Guided RAAR) phase retrieval method that can effectively address this inconsistency problem and provides artifact-free solutions. The CG-RAAR methodology is first illustrated with simulated unblocked noisy Fourier intensity data and later applied to centrally-blocked noisy cyanobacterium data which is available from the CXIDB database. Our simulation and experimental results using CG-RAAR suggest two important improvements over the popular RAAR-ER algorithm. The CG-RAAR solutions after the averaging procedure is more reliable in the sense that it contains smallest features consistent with the resolution estimated by the PRTF curve. Secondly, since the single run of the CG-RAAR solution does not have grainy artifacts, the number of trial solutions needed for the averaging process is reduced.