1. What are the contributions in "Atomic super-resolution tomography" ?
The authors consider the problem of reconstructing a nanocrystal at atomic resolution from electron microscopy images taken at a few tilt angles.. Here the authors propose a grid-free discrete tomography algorithm that allows for continuous deviations of the atom locations similar to super-resolution approaches for microscopy.. In computational experiments, the authors compare the proposed grid-free method to established grid-based approaches and show that their approach can indeed recover the atom positions more accurately for common lattice defects.. 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.
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2. What are the future works mentioned in the paper "Atomic super-resolution tomography" ?
For future work, the authors will extend their numerical studies on this atomic super-resolution approach to larger-sized scenarios in 3D, featuring realistic measurement noise, acquisition geometries, more suitable and accurate physical interaction potentials and different atom types.. This will require additional computational effort to scale up their algorithm and will then allow us to work on real electron tomography data of nanocrystals.
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3. What did the authors find useful in the optimisation problem?
Adding the potential energy of the atomic configuration to the optimisation problem resulted in reconstructions that were closer to the ground truth.
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4. How many atoms did the simulated annealing algorithm have?
Although FISTA reconstructions, which include sparsity constraints on the weights, were less blurry, atoms still occupied more than one pixel.
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