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Transport-of-intensity equation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The transport-of-intensity equation (TIE) is a computational approach to reconstruct the phase of a complex wave in optical and electron microscopy.[1] It describes the internal relationship between the intensity and phase distribution of a wave.[2]
The TIE was first proposed in 1983 by Michael Reed Teague.[3] Teague suggested to use the law of conservation of energy to write a differential equation for the transport of energy by an optical field. This equation, he stated, could be used as an approach to phase recovery.[4]
Teague approximated the amplitude of the wave propagating nominally in the z-direction by a parabolic equation and then expressed it in terms of irradiance and phase:
where is the wavelength, is the irradiance at point , and is the phase of the wave. If the intensity distribution of the wave and its spatial derivative can be measured experimentally, the equation becomes a linear equation that can be solved to obtain the phase distribution .[5]
For a phase sample with a constant intensity, the TIE simplifies to
It allows measuring the phase distribution of the sample by acquiring a defocused image, i.e. .
TIE-based approaches are applied in biomedical and technical applications, such as quantitative monitoring of cell growth in culture,[6] investigation of cellular dynamics and characterization of optical elements.[7] The TIE method is also applied for phase retrieval in transmission electron microscopy.[8]
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References
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