26 research outputs found
Diffractive heavy vector meson production from the BFKL equation
Diffractive heavy vector meson photoproduction accompanied by proton
dissociation is studied for arbitrary momentum transfer. The process is
described by the non-forward BFKL equation, for which a complete analytical
solution is found, giving the scattering amplitude. The impact of non-leading
corrections to the BFKL equation is also analysed. Results are compared to the
HERA data on J/psi production.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, version to appear in EPJC. Discussion of
infrared details expande
Diffractive Vector Meson Production with a Large Momentum Transfer
We summarise recent progress in the computation of helicity amplitudes for
diffractive vector meson production at large momentum transfer and their
comparison to data collected at the HERA collider.Comment: Talk presented at EPS2003, Aachen, July 2003. 4 page
Model-based correction for scatter and tailing effects in simultaneous 99mTc and 123I imaging for a CdZnTe cardiac SPECT camera
2015 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine. An advantage of semiconductor-based dedicated cardiac single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) cameras when compared to conventional Anger cameras is superior energy resolution. This provides the potential for improved separation of the photopeaks in dual radionuclide imaging, such as combined use of 99mTc and 123I . There is, however, the added complexity of tailing effects in the detectors that must be accounted for. In this paper we present a model-based correction algorithm which extracts the useful primary counts of 99mTc and 123I from projection data. Equations describing the in-patient scatter and tailing effects in the detectors are iteratively solved for both radionuclides simultaneously using a maximum a posteriori probability algorithm with one-step-late evaluation. Energy window-dependent parameters for the equations describing in-patient scatter are estimated using Monte Carlo simulations. Parameters for the equations describing tailing effects are estimated using virtually scatter-free experimental measurements on a dedicated cardiac SPECT camera with CdZnTe-detectors. When applied to a phantom study with both 99mTc and 123I, results show that the estimated spatial distribution of events from 99mTc in the 99mTc photopeak energy window is very similar to that measured in a single 99mTc phantom study. The extracted images of primary events display increased cold lesion contrasts for both 99mTc and 123I
A framework for organ dose estimation in x-ray angiography and interventional radiology based on dose-related data in DICOM structured reports
Although interventional x-ray angiography (XA) procedures involve relatively high
radiation doses that can lead to deterministic tissue reactions in addition to
stochastic effects, convenient and accurate estimation of absorbed organ doses
has traditionally been out of reach. This has mainly been due to the absence of
practical means to access dose-related data that describe the physical context of
the numerous exposures during an XA procedure. The present work provides a
comprehensive and general framework for the determination of absorbed organ dose,
based on non-proprietary access to dose-related data by utilizing widely
available DICOM radiation dose structured reports. The framework comprises a
straightforward calculation workflow to determine the incident kerma and
reconstruction of the geometrical relation between the projected x-ray beam and
the patient's anatomy. The latter is difficult in practice, as the position of
the patient on the table top is unknown. A novel patient-specific approach for
reconstruction of the patient position on the table is presented. The proposed
approach was evaluated for 150 patients by comparing the estimated position of
the primary irradiated organs (the target organs) with their position in clinical
DICOM images. The approach is shown to locate the target organ position with a
mean (max) deviation of 1.3 (4.3), 1.8 (3.6) and 1.4 (2.9) cm for neurovascular,
adult and paediatric cardiovascular procedures, respectively. To illustrate the
utility of the framework for systematic and automated organ dose estimation in
routine clinical practice, a prototype implementation of the framework with Monte
Carlo simulations is included.NoneAccepte
Vector Meson Photoproduction from the BFKL Equation II: Phenomenology
Diffractive vector meson photoproduction accompanied by proton dissociation
is studied for large momentum transfer. The process is described by the
non-forward BFKL equation which we use to compare to data collected at the HERA
collider.Comment: 39 pages, 29 figure
PRaVDA: The First Solid-State System for Proton Computed Tomography
Proton CT is widely recognised as a beneficial alternative to con- ventional X-ray CT for treatment planning in proton beam radiotherapy. A novel proton CT imaging system, based entirely on solid-state detec- tor technology, is presented. Compared to conventional scintillator-based calorimeters, positional sensitive detectors allow for multiple protons to be tracked per read out cycle, leading to a potential reduction in proton CT scan time. Design and characterisation of its components are discussed. An early proton CT image obtained with a fully solid-state imaging sys- tem is shown and accuracy (as defined in Section IV) in Relative Stopping Power to water (RSP) quantified.
A solid-state imaging system for proton CT, based on silicon strip detectors, has been developed by the PRaVDA collaboration. The sys- tem comprises a tracking system that infers individual proton trajecto- ries through an imaging phantom, and a Range Telescope (RT) which records the corresponding residual energy (range) for each proton. A back-projection-then-filtering algorithm is used for CT reconstruction of an experimentally acquired proton CT scan.
An initial experimental result for proton CT imaging with a fully solid-state system is shown for an imaging phantom, namely a 75 mm diameter PMMA sphere containing tissue substitute inserts,imaged with a passively-scattered 125 MeV beam. Accuracy in RSP is measured to be ≤1.6% for all the inserts shown.
A fully solid-state imaging system for proton CT has been shown capable of imaging a phantom with protons and successfully improving RSP accuracy. These promising results, together with system the capabil- ity to cope with high proton fluences (2Ă—108 protons/s), suggests that this research platform could improve current standards in treatment planning for proton beam radiotherapy
Assembly, apparatus, system and method (PRaVDA strip detector)
Some embodiments of the present invention provide a 2D position-sensitive detector assembly comprising at least three substantially planar detector portions arranged in overlapping relationship as viewed normal to a plane of the detector portions, each detector portion comprising an array of substantially parallel, linear detector elements, the detector elements of respective detector portions being mutually non-parallel, the detector elements each being configured to generate one or more electrical signals in response to interaction of a particle of radiation therewith
Assembly, apparatus, system and method (PRaVDA range telescope)
Some embodiments of the present invention provide apparatus for detecting particles of radiation comprising: a plurality of solid state semiconductor detector devices provided at spaced apart locations along a beam axis, the detector devices each being configured to generate an electrical signal indicative of passage of a particle through or absorption of a particle by the device; and at least one absorber portion configured to absorb at least a portion of an energy of a particle, wherein one said at least one absorber portion is provided in a particle path between at least one pair of adjacent detector devices, the apparatus being configured to provide an output signal indicative of the energy of a particle, the output signal provided being dependent on the electrical signals indicative of passage of a particle through or absorption of a particle by the devices
Method and apparatus for proton computed tomography
A method of reconstructing a 3-dimensional image in a proton transmission computerised tomography (CT) apparatus is disclosed. The method comprises the creation of a reconstruction matrix. The matrix is created by directing a plurality of particles to traverse the object; and for each particle, measuring the trajectory and energy of each particle before and after it has traversed the object; for each particle, calculating the water-equivalent path length within the object; and for each particle, calculating the positions at which it entered and exited the object; and adding the water-equivalent path length, entry and exit positions to the reconstruction matrix. This procedure is repeated from a plurality of angular positions surrounding an object to be imaged. Then, a spatially varying 2- dimensional filter function is applied to the reconstruction matrix. Subsequently, a correction factor is applied to the filtered reconstruction matrix to at least partially correct for the finite extent of the matrix