REVIEW 2 major objections 2 minor 60 references
X-ray beam-tracking microscopy resolves features at least 3 micrometers in size, smaller than the beam apertures, with the dark-field channel offering the highest resolution.
Reviewed by Pith at T0; open to challenge. T0 means a machine referee read the full paper against a public rubric. the ladder, T0–T4 →
T0 review · grok-4.3
2026-06-28 04:28 UTC pith:5T74LIIK
load-bearing objection New OTF model for beam-tracking resolution derived from Fokker-Planck, with experiments showing sub-aperture performance and stronger dark-field sharpness, but the approximation step is the weakest link. the 2 major comments →
Spatial resolution of X-ray beam-tracking microscopy
The pith
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using the Fokker-Planck equation for near-field imaging, we derive optical transfer functions that fully describe the spatial resolution in transmission, phase, and dark-field channels of beam-tracking. Validation with synchrotron and lab setups using 15 μm and 10 μm apertures demonstrates a limiting resolution of at least 3 μm. This formally confirms the superior resolution of the dark-field channel compared to the others.
What carries the argument
The optical transfer function model derived from the Fokker-Planck equation for each contrast channel, which predicts how resolution depends on aperture size and propagation.
Load-bearing premise
The Fokker-Planck equation accurately captures the X-ray propagation physics that set the resolution limits in each imaging channel.
What would settle it
An experiment showing that the measured resolution in the dark-field channel is no better than in the transmission channel, or that it matches the aperture size rather than being smaller.
If this is right
- Dark-field images can capture finer details than transmission or phase images in the same setup.
- System design can prioritize smaller effective resolutions by leveraging the model rather than just aperture size.
- Experimental protocols can be optimized to exploit the higher resolution in dark-field.
- The model allows prediction of resolution for different aperture shapes and sizes.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This could extend beam-tracking to applications requiring sub-aperture resolution, such as imaging of small biological structures.
- Similar modeling might apply to other phase-contrast techniques using different equations.
- Testing with even smaller apertures could reveal further limits or confirm the model.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript derives a complete optical transfer function (OTF) model for the transmission, phase, and dark-field channels of X-ray beam-tracking microscopy by invoking the Fokker-Planck equation for near-field propagation. Experiments performed with both synchrotron and laboratory sources, using 15 μm circular and 10 μm rectangular apertures, are reported to demonstrate a limiting spatial resolution of at least 3 μm (smaller than the apertures) and to confirm superior resolution in the dark-field channel relative to the other two.
Significance. If the central derivation holds, the work supplies the first analytic description of aperture-driven resolution across all three contrast channels and supplies a parameter-free route (via the Fokker-Planck equation rather than empirical fits) to predict and optimize performance. The dual synchrotron/laboratory validation and the explicit confirmation of the dark-field advantage constitute concrete strengths that could directly inform aperture design and imaging protocols.
major comments (2)
- [model derivation section] Model derivation (the section that obtains the channel-specific OTFs from the Fokker-Planck equation): the mapping from the Fokker-Planck propagator to the three distinct OTFs must be shown explicitly, including the precise manner in which the finite aperture transmission function enters the small-angle scattering term; without these intermediate steps the claim that the model is fully derived rather than postulated cannot be verified.
- [experimental validation section] Experimental validation section (the paragraphs reporting the 3 μm limit): the quantitative procedure used to extract the limiting resolution from the measured edge or bar-pattern data (including the exact fitting function, data exclusion criteria, and error propagation) is required to substantiate that the reported 3 μm value is not an upper bound set by the analysis method itself.
minor comments (2)
- [figure captions] Figure captions should state the exact spatial frequencies at which the measured MTFs cross the conventional 10 % or 5 % threshold so that the 3 μm claim can be read directly from the plots.
- [introduction or methods] The abstract states that the model is 'derived' from the Fokker-Planck equation; the corresponding sentence in the main text should cite the specific form of the Fokker-Planck operator employed (e.g., the diffusion coefficient or the scattering kernel).
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their constructive review and positive assessment of the work's significance. We address the two major comments point by point below. Both can be resolved by expanding the relevant sections with additional explicit steps and procedural details, which we will incorporate in the revised manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [model derivation section] Model derivation (the section that obtains the channel-specific OTFs from the Fokker-Planck equation): the mapping from the Fokker-Planck propagator to the three distinct OTFs must be shown explicitly, including the precise manner in which the finite aperture transmission function enters the small-angle scattering term; without these intermediate steps the claim that the model is fully derived rather than postulated cannot be verified.
Authors: We agree that the intermediate mapping steps from the Fokker-Planck propagator to the transmission, phase, and dark-field OTFs, including the explicit role of the finite aperture transmission function in the small-angle scattering term, should be presented in greater detail. The revised manuscript will expand the model derivation section to include these steps explicitly, ensuring the derivation is fully transparent and verifiable rather than appearing postulated. revision: yes
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Referee: [experimental validation section] Experimental validation section (the paragraphs reporting the 3 μm limit): the quantitative procedure used to extract the limiting resolution from the measured edge or bar-pattern data (including the exact fitting function, data exclusion criteria, and error propagation) is required to substantiate that the reported 3 μm value is not an upper bound set by the analysis method itself.
Authors: We will revise the experimental validation section to provide a complete description of the quantitative procedure for determining the 3 μm limiting resolution. This will include the exact fitting function applied to the edge or bar-pattern data, the data exclusion criteria employed, and the full error propagation analysis. These additions will demonstrate that the reported resolution is not an artifact of the analysis method. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: model derived from external Fokker-Planck equation with independent experimental validation
full rationale
The paper derives its OTF model for transmission, phase, and dark-field channels directly from the Fokker-Planck equation for near-field imaging, an external physical assumption not constructed from the paper's own data or prior fits. Experimental results with 10-15 µm apertures yielding 3 µm resolution are presented as validation rather than inputs to the model. No self-citation chains, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or self-definitional steps are indicated in the abstract or reader's summary. The central claims remain independent of the authors' own prior outputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The Fokker-Planck equation accurately describes near-field X-ray propagation for the beam-tracking geometry.
read the original abstract
X-ray beam-tracking is a phase-contrast imaging technique capable of simultaneously retrieving transmission, phase, and dark-field images. Although the spatial resolution in beam-tracking is largely considered to be 'aperture driven', no model yet exists to describe this in full. The dark-field channel is of particular interest, due to previous observations of anomalously high sharpness compared to transmission and phase channels. We derive a full optical transfer function model for each contrast channel using the Fokker-Planck equation for near-field imaging. Experimental validation using both synchrotron-based and laboratory-based setups, with 15 um circular and 10 um rectangular apertures, reveals a limiting resolution of at least 3 um, much smaller than the apertures themselves. Together, the model and the supporting experiments offer a full description of spatial resolution in beam-tracking, and formally confirm the greater spatial resolution in the dark-field channel. These findings open new possibilities in system design and experimental protocols to exploit these capabilities.
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G. Havariyoun, L. Massimi, C. Hagen, M. Endrizzi, and A. Olivo, “Modulation transfer function (mtf) evaluation for x-ray phase imaging system employing attenuation masks,” Physics in Medicine & Biology , vol. 68, no. 9, p. 09NT02, 2023
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Retrieval of weak x-ray scattering using edge illumination,
C. J. M. Jones, F. A. Vittoria, A. Olivo, M. Endrizzi, and P. R. Munro, “Retrieval of weak x-ray scattering using edge illumination,” Optics Letters , vol. 43, no. 16, pp. 3874–3877, 2018
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Strategies for efficient and fast wave optics simulation of coded-aperture and other x-ray phase-contrast imaging methods,
F. A. Vittoria, P. C. Diemoz, M. Endrizzi, L. Rigon, F. C. Lopez, D. Dreossi, P. R. Munro, and A. Olivo, “Strategies for efficient and fast wave optics simulation of coded-aperture and other x-ray phase-contrast imaging methods,” Applied optics, vol. 52, no. 28, pp. 6940–6947, 2013. 13 Appendix 1 Detector crosstalk The derived model has assumed an ideal im...
2013
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