51 research outputs found
Plastic-scintillator based PET detector for proton beam therapy range monitoring : preliminary study
Studies of discrete symmetries in decays of positronium atoms
A positronium - a bound state of electron and positron - is an eigenstate of parity and charge conjugation operators which decays into photons. It is a unique laboratory to study discrete symmetries whose precision is limited, in principle, by the effects due to the weak interactions expected at the level of 10−14 and photon-photon interactions expected at the level of 10−9.
The Jagiellonian Positron Emission Tomograph (J-PET) is a detector for medical imaging as well as for physics studies involving detection of electronpositron annihilation into photons. The physics case covers the areas of discrete symmetries studies and genuine multipartite entanglement. The J-PET detector has high angular and time resolution and allows for determination of spin of the positronium and the momenta and polarization vectors of annihilation quanta. In this article, we present the potential of the J-PET system for studies of discrete symmetries in decays of positronium atoms
Overview of the software architecture and data flow for the J-PET tomography device
Modern TOF-PET scanner systems require high-speed computing resources for efficient data processing, monitoring and image reconstruction. In this article, we present the data flow and software architecture for the novel TOF-PET scanner developed by the J-PET Collaboration. We discuss the data acquisition system, reconstruction framework and image reconstruction software. Also, the concept of computing outside hospitals in the remote centers such as Świerk Computing Centre in Poland is presented
Analysis procedure of the positronium lifetime spectra for the J-PET detector
Positron Annihilation Lifetime Spectroscopy (PALS) has shown to be a powerful
tool to study the nanostructures of porous materials. Positron Emissions
Tomography (PET) are devices allowing imaging of metabolic processes e.g. in
human bodies. A newly developed device, the J-PET (Jagiellonian PET), will
allow PALS in addition to imaging, thus combining both analyses providing new
methods for physics and medicine. In this contribution we present a computer
program that is compatible with the J-PET software. We compare its performance
with the standard program LT 9.0 by using PALS data from hexane measurements at
different temperatures. Our program is based on an iterative procedure, and our
fits prove that it performs as good as LT 9.0.Comment: 4 figures, 8 page
Sampling FEE and trigger-less DAQ for the J-PET scanner
In this paper, we present a complete Data Acquisition System (DAQ) together with the readout mechanisms for the J-PET tomography scanner. In general, detector readout chain is constructed out of Front-End Electronics (FEE) measurement devices such as Time-to-Digital or Analog-to-Digital Converters (TDCs or ADCs), data collectors and storage. We have developed a system capable for maintaining continuous readout of digitized data without preliminary selection. Such operation mode results in up to 8 Gbps data stream, therefore, it is required to introduce a dedicated module for on-line event building and feature extraction. The Central Controller Module, equipped with Xilinx Zynq SoC and 16 optical transceivers, serves as such true real time computing facility. Our solution for the continuous data recording (trigger-less) is a novel approach in such detector systems and assures that most of the information is preserved on the storage for further, high-level processing. Signal discrimination applies a unique method of using LVDS buffers located in the FPGA fabric
Positronium imaging with the novel multiphoton PET scanner
In vivo assessment of cancer and precise location of altered tissues at
initial stages of molecular disorders are important diagnostic challenges.
Positronium is copiously formed in the free molecular spaces in the patient's
body during positron emission tomography (PET). The positronium properties vary
according to the size of inter- and intramolecular voids and the concentration
of molecules in them such as, e.g., molecular oxygen, O2; therefore,
positronium imaging may provide information about disease progression during
the initial stages of molecular alterations. Current PET systems do not allow
acquisition of positronium images. This study presents a new method that
enables positronium imaging by simultaneous registration of annihilation
photons and deexcitation photons from pharmaceuticals labeled with
radionuclides. The first positronium imaging of a phantom built from cardiac
myxoma and adipose tissue is demonstrated. It is anticipated that positronium
imaging will substantially enhance the specificity of PET diagnostics.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Feasibility study of the time reversal symmetry tests in decay of metastable positronium atoms with the J-PET detector
This article reports on the feasibility of testing of the symmetry under reversal in time in a purely leptonic system constituted by positronium atoms using the J-PET detector. The present state of T symmetry tests is discussed with an emphasis on the scarcely explored sector of leptonic systems. Two possible strategies of searching for manifestations of T violation in nonvanishing angular correlations of final state observables in the decay of metastable triplet states of positronium available with J-PET are proposed and discussed. Results of a pilot measurement with J-PET and assessment of its performance in reconstruction of three-photon decays are shown along with an analysis of its impact on the sensitivity of the detector for the determination of T-violation sensitive observables
Estimating the NEMA characteristics of the J-PET tomograph using the GATE package
The novel whole-body PET system based on plastic scintillators is developed
by the {J-PET} Collaboration. It consists of plastic scintillator strips
arranged axially in the form of a cylinder, allowing the cost-effective
construction of the total-body PET. In order to determine properties of the
scanner prototype and optimize its geometry, advanced computer simulations
using the GATE software were performed.
The spatial resolution, the sensitivity, the scatter fraction and the noise
equivalent count rate were estimated according to the NEMA norm as a function
of the length of the tomograph, number of the detection layers, diameter of the
tomographic chamber and for various types of the applied readout. For the
single-layer geometry with the diameter of 85 cm, strip length of 100 cm,
cross-section of 4 mm x 20 mm and silicon photomultipliers with the additional
layer of wavelength shifter as the readout, the spatial resolution (FWHM) in
the centre of the scanner is equal to 3 mm (radial, tangential) and 6 mm
(axial). For the analogous double-layer geometry with the same readout,
diameter and scintillator length, with the strip cross-section of 7 mm x 20 mm,
the NECR peak of 300 kcps was reached at 40 kBq/cc activity concentration, the
scatter fraction is estimated to about 35% and the sensitivity at the centre
amounts to 14.9 cps/kBq. Sensitivity profiles were also determined
Introduction of total variation regularization into filtered backprojection algorithm
In this paper we extend the state-of-the-art filtered backprojection (FBP) method with application of the concept of Total Variation regularization. We compare the performance of the new algorithm with the most common form of regularizing in the FBP image reconstruction via apodizing functions. The methods are validated in terms of cross-correlation coefficient between reconstructed and real image of radioactive tracer distribution using standard Derenzo-type phantom. We demonstrate that the proposed approach results in higher cross-correlation values with respect to the standard FBP method
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