H. Ding, Z. Wang, F. Nguyen, S. A. Boppart, and G. Popescu, Fourier transform light scattering of inhomogeneous and dynamic structures, Phys. Rev. Lett., 101, 238102 (2008).

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Fourier transform light scattering (FTLS) is a novel experimental approach that combines optical microscopy, holography, and light scattering for studying inhomogeneous and dynamic media. In FTLS the optical phase and amplitude of a coherent image field are quantified and propagated numerically to the scattering plane. Because it detects all the scattered angles (spatial frequencies) simultaneously in each point of the image, FTLS can be regarded as the spatial equivalent of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, where all the temporal frequencies are detected at each moment in time.

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