1. Interface-specific x-ray phase retrieval tomography of complex biological organs.
- Author
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M A Beltran, D M Paganin, K K W Siu, A Fouras, S B Hooper, D H Reser, and M J Kitchen
- Subjects
BRAIN tomography ,THORAX (Zoology) ,X-rays ,REFRACTIVE index ,APPROXIMATION theory ,ATTENUATION (Physics) - Abstract
We demonstrate interface-specific propagation-based x-ray phase retrieval tomography of the thorax and brain of small animals. Our method utilizes a single propagation-based x-ray phase-contrast image per projection, under the assumptions of (i) partially coherent paraxial radiation, (ii) a static object whose refractive indices take on one of a series of distinct values at each point in space and (iii) the projection approximation. For the biological samples used here, there was a 9-200 fold improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio of the phase-retrieved tomograms over the conventional attenuation-contrast signal. The ability to 'digitally dissect' a biological specimen, using only a single phase-contrast image per projection, will be useful for low-dose high-spatial-resolution biomedical imaging of form and biological function in both healthy and diseased tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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