
We consider the problem of reconstructing a nanocrystal at atomic resolution from electron microscopy images taken at a few tilt angles. A popular reconstruction approach called discrete tomography confines the atom locations to a coarse spatial grid, which is inspired by the physical a priori knowledge that atoms in a crystalline solid tend to form regular lattices. Although this constraint has proven to be powerful for solving this very under-determined inverse problem in many cases, its key limitation is that, in practice, defects may occur that cause atoms to deviate from regular lattice positions. Here we propose a grid-free discrete tomography algorithm that allows for continuous deviations of the atom locations similar to super-resolution approaches for microscopy. The new formulation allows us to define atomic interaction potentials explicitly, which results in a both meaningful and powerful incorporation of the available physical a priori knowledge about the crystal's properties. In computational experiments, we compare the proposed grid-free method to established grid-based approaches and show that our approach can indeed recover the atom positions more accurately for common lattice defects.
16 pages, 5 figures
Condensed Matter - Materials Science, Image and Video Processing (eess.IV), Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci), FOS: Physical sciences, Numerical Analysis (math.NA), Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing, Computational Physics (physics.comp-ph), 65K10, 65M32, FOS: Mathematics, FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Mathematics - Numerical Analysis, Physics - Computational Physics
Condensed Matter - Materials Science, Image and Video Processing (eess.IV), Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci), FOS: Physical sciences, Numerical Analysis (math.NA), Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing, Computational Physics (physics.comp-ph), 65K10, 65M32, FOS: Mathematics, FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Mathematics - Numerical Analysis, Physics - Computational Physics
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