Abstract:Heavy particle radiography is a newly developed noninvasive low dose imaging procedure with increased resolution of minute density differences in soft t sues of the body. The method utilizes accelerated high energy ions, primarily carbon and neon, at the BEVALAC accelerator at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. The research'program applied to medicine utilizes heavy-ion radiography for low dose mammography, for treatment planning for cancer patients, and for imaging and accurate densitometry of skeletal structu… Show more
“…A detector developed in the 1970s at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory was based on plastic nuclear track detectors. 14,15 However, the requirement of a wet chemistry developing process prevented the application of such a detector in modern clinics. Another integrating-type system was developed based on the CCD camera and scintillator.…”
The results demonstrate the feasibility of using silicon diode arrays for proton imaging. Such a device can potentially offer fast image acquisition and high spatial and energy resolution for PR and PCT.
“…A detector developed in the 1970s at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory was based on plastic nuclear track detectors. 14,15 However, the requirement of a wet chemistry developing process prevented the application of such a detector in modern clinics. Another integrating-type system was developed based on the CCD camera and scintillator.…”
The results demonstrate the feasibility of using silicon diode arrays for proton imaging. Such a device can potentially offer fast image acquisition and high spatial and energy resolution for PR and PCT.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.