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This thesis describes novel approaches and implementation of
high-resolution microscopy in the extreme ultraviolet light regime.
Using coherent ultrafast laser-generated short wavelength radiation
for illuminating samples allows imaging beyond the resolution of
visible-light microscopes. Michael Zurch gives a comprehensive
overview of the fundamentals and techniques involved, starting from
the laser-based frequency conversion scheme and its technical
implementation as well as general considerations of
diffraction-based imaging at nanoscopic spatial resolution.
Experiments on digital in-line holography and coherent diffraction
imaging of artificial and biologic specimens are demonstrated and
discussed in this book. In the field of biologic imaging, a novel
award-winning cell classification scheme and its first experimental
application for identifying breast cancer cells are introduced.
Finally, this book presents a newly developed technique of
generating structured illumination by means of so-called optical
vortex beams in the extreme ultraviolet regime and proposes its
general usability for super-resolution imaging.
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