Young's double-slit interference with single hard X-ray photons

Double-slit interference experiments using monochromatic hard X-rays with the energy of 25 keV are presented. The experiments were performed at a synchrotron source with a distance of 110 m between the interferometer and the detector to produce an interference pattern with a sufficiently broad perio...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inOptics express Vol. 32; no. 11; pp. 19294 - 19307
Main Authors Gureyev, Timur E, Hall, Chris J, Arhatari, Benedicta, Pelliccia, Daniele, Aminzadeh, Alaleh, Pavlov, Konstantin M, Quiney, Harry M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 20.05.2024
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Summary:Double-slit interference experiments using monochromatic hard X-rays with the energy of 25 keV are presented. The experiments were performed at a synchrotron source with a distance of 110 m between the interferometer and the detector to produce an interference pattern with a sufficiently broad period that could be adequately sampled by a photon-counting detector with 75 micrometre pixels. In the single-particle version of the experiment, over one million image frames with a single registered photon in each one were collected. The sum of these frames showed a clear presence of the interference pattern with the expected period. Subsequent analysis provided an objective estimation of the minimal number of detected photons required to determine, in accordance with the Rose criterion, the presence of the photon interference. Apart from a general theoretical interest, these investigations were aimed at exploring the possibility of medical X-ray phase-contrast imaging in photon-counting regime at minimal radiation doses.
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ISSN:1094-4087
1094-4087
DOI:10.1364/OE.521892