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Computed tomography of a medium size Roman bronze statue of Cupid
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Diagnostics based on X-ray computed tomography (CT) are becoming increasingly important, not only in the medical field but in industry and cultural heritage. CT devices typical for medical applications, however, can seldom be used on art objects because both they are not easily transportable and they often present high X-ray absorption. It is therefore necessary to make use of portable instrumentation and/or to develop tomographic systems optimized to the characteristics of the objects under examination. This work describes the computed tomography of a first century A.D. Roman bronze statue of Cupid (96.AB.53) in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum, within the collaborative framework between the Getty Conservation Institute and the Department of Physics and Astronomy (DIFA) of the University of Bologna (Italy). The tomography performed at the Getty facilities employed a 450 kV X-ray tube and a detection system developed at DIFA. The study highlighted the casting and construction techniques used by Roman foundry workers and provided information on the status of conservation of the statue. A 3D virtual reconstruction allowed the user to define different cross-sections enabling the study of the internal features.
- Subjects :
- X-ray computed tomography
Engineering drawing
medicine.diagnostic_test
Computed tomography
General Chemistry
engineering.material
Cultural heritage
Virtual reconstruction
medicine
engineering
General Materials Science
Statue
Instrumentation (computer programming)
Tomography
Bronze
Culural Heritage
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d1e0668c4bd3f849d56351e12c699624