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The Talbot effect is the self-imaging, at distances D multiple of DR, of the intensity downstream of a periodic object. Earlier work with hard synchrotron radiation X-rays showed the variation with D of the fundamental Fourier component of intensity to be a good measurement of beam coherence. Any higher-order Fourier coefficients \tilde{I}(D, m > 1) would be periodic with a reduced period DRm = DR/m for an ideally coherent incident beam (partial Talbot effect). The degree of coherence γ(x) is sampled through the ratio of \tilde{I}(D, m) at D = 0 and multiples of DRm. This requires the Fourier coefficient for D = 0, which is not accessible for a phase object (no contrast at D = 0). However, the ratio of the slopes of \tilde{I}(D, m) at D = 0 and D = pDRm also provides this information. Furthermore, a characterization of γ(x) is possible, provided an assumption is made on its shape, using only the ratio of the Fourier coefficient \tilde{I}(D, m) of two images a distance pDRm apart. Experiments with one- and two-dimensional phase gratings and a mixed (amplitude and phase) two-dimensional grating confirm that the partial Talbot effect approach is viable. It requires a reduced range of distances, and yields important results directly, obviating the need for computer fits. In particular, 8% of the beam intensity was found to have very low coherence in the vertical direction, probably due to monochromator imperfection.

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