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Dynamic coherent diffractive imaging with a physics-driven untrained learning method.

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Reconstruction of a complex field from one single diffraction measurement remains a challenging task among the community of coherent diffraction imaging (CDI). Conventional iterative algorithms are time-consuming and struggle to… Click to show full abstract

Reconstruction of a complex field from one single diffraction measurement remains a challenging task among the community of coherent diffraction imaging (CDI). Conventional iterative algorithms are time-consuming and struggle to converge to a feasible solution because of the inherent ambiguities. Recently, deep-learning-based methods have shown considerable success in computational imaging, but they require large amounts of training data that in many cases are difficult to obtain. Here, we introduce a physics-driven untrained learning method, termed Deep CDI, which addresses the above problem and can image a dynamic process with high confidence and fast reconstruction. Without any labeled data for pretraining, the Deep CDI can reconstruct a complex-valued object from a single diffraction pattern by combining a conventional artificial neural network with a real-world physical imaging model. To our knowledge, we are the first to demonstrate that the support region constraint, which is widely used in the iteration-algorithm-based method, can be utilized for loss calculation. The loss calculated from support constraint and free propagation constraint are summed up to optimize the network's weights. As a proof of principle, numerical simulations and optical experiments on a static sample are carried out to demonstrate the feasibility of our method. We then continuously collect 3600 diffraction patterns and demonstrate that our method can predict the dynamic process with an average reconstruction speed of 228 frames per second (FPS) using only a fraction of the diffraction data to train the weights.

Keywords: physics; physics driven; learning method; diffraction; driven untrained; untrained learning

Journal Title: Optics express
Year Published: 2021

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