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The phase retrieval problem, where one aims to recover a complex-valued image from far-field intensity measurements, is a classic problem encountered in a range of imaging applications. Modern phase retrieval approaches usually rely on gradient descent methods in a nonlinear minimization framework. Calculating closed-form gradients for use in these methods is tedious work, and formulating second order derivatives is even more laborious. Additionally, second order techniques often require the storage and inversion of large matrices of partial derivatives, with memory requirements that can be prohibitive for data-rich imaging modalities. We use a reverse-mode automatic differentiation (AD) framework to implement an efficient matrix-free version of the Levenberg-Marquardt (LM) algorithm, a longstanding method that finds popular use in nonlinear least-square minimization problems but which has seen little use in phase retrieval. Furthermore, we extend the basic LM algorithm so that it can be applied for general constrained optimization problems beyond just the least-square applications. Since we use AD, we only need to specify the physics-based forward model for a specific imaging application; the derivative terms are calculated automatically through matrix-vector products, without explicitly forming any large Jacobian or Gauss-Newton matrices. We demonstrate that this algorithm can be used to solve both the unconstrained ptychographic object retrieval problem and the constrained blind ptychographic object and probe retrieval problems, under both the Gaussian and Poisson noise models, and that this method outperforms best-in-class first-order ptychographic reconstruction methods: it provides excellent convergence guarantees with (in many cases) a superlinear rate of convergence, all with a computational cost comparable to, or lower than, the tested first-order algorithms.
Implementations in R of classical general-purpose algorithms generally have two major limitations which make them unusable in complex problems: too loose convergence criteria and too long calculation time. By relying on a Marquardt-Levenberg algorith
The inverse problem in Acousto-Electric tomography concerns the reconstruction of the electric conductivity in a domain from knowledge of the power density function in the interior of the body. This interior power density results from currents prescr
Ptychography is a popular imaging technique that combines diffractive imaging with scanning microscopy. The technique consists of a coherent beam that is scanned across an object in a series of overlapping positions, leading to reliable and improved
Recently, efforts have been made to improve ptychography phase retrieval algorithms so that they are more robust against noise. Often the algorithm is adapted by changing the cost functional that needs to be minimized. In particular, it has been sugg
Coherent X-ray beams with energies $geq 50$ keV can potentially enable three-dimensional imaging of atomic lattice distortion fields within individual crystallites in bulk polycrystalline materials through Bragg coherent diffraction imaging (BCDI). H