X-ray microscopy
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- review article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Reports on Progress in Physics
- Vol. 51 (12) , 1525-1606
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0034-4885/51/12/002
Abstract
Developments in microscopy using soft X-rays (energies between about 100 eV and 2 keV) over the last ten years or so are reviewed. The main advances have been in intense sources, principally synchrotron radiation and plasma sources and in X-ray optical components such as grazing incidence reflectors, multilayer mirrors and zone plates. The different types of X-ray microscopy are described and images obtained are compared with those from the much better established techniques of electron and optical microscopy. Finally, prospects for the future are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- XUV LasersJournal of Modern Optics, 1988
- Commercial synchrotron storage ringsSynchrotron Radiation News, 1988
- The Manufacture of Blazed Zone Plates Using a Fabry-Perot InterferometerJournal of Modern Optics, 1988
- Generation of soft x rays using a rare gas-hydrogen plasma focus and its application to x-ray lithographyApplied Physics Letters, 1986
- Electron beam writing on a 20-Å scale in metal β-aluminasApplied Physics Letters, 1983
- Low-energy x-ray interaction coefficients: Photoabsorption, scattering, and reflectionAtomic Data and Nuclear Data Tables, 1982
- Bessy SX/700: A monochromator system covering the spectral range 3 eV≲h̵ω≲700eVNuclear Instruments and Methods, 1980
- Multilayer interference mirrors for the XUV range around 100 eV photon energyOptics Communications, 1976
- Soft X-ray imaging zone plates with large zone numbers for microscopic and spectroscopic applicationsOptics Communications, 1974
- Röntgen-Bildwandler-MikroskopieThe European Physical Journal A, 1957