Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal Welcome to MRI Technology
Info
  Sheets

Out-
      side
 



 
 'Analog' 
SEARCH FOR    
 
  2 3 5 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Result : Searchterm 'Analog' found in 3 terms [] and 20 definitions []
previous     6 - 10 (of 23)     next
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3 4 5]
Searchterm 'Analog' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (2)  Resources  (1)  
 
Hardware
 
MRI hardware includes the electrical and mechanical components of a scanning device.
The main hardware components for the MRI machine are:
The magnet establishing the B0 field to align the spins.
Within the magnet are the gradient coils for producing variations in B0 in the X, Y, and Z directions to make a localization of the received data possible.
Within the gradient coil or directly on the object being imaged is the radio frequency (RF) coil. This RF coil is used to establish the B1 magnetic field necessary to excite the spinning nuclei. The RF coil also detects the signal emitted from the spins within the object being imaged.
The RF amplifier increases the power of the pulses.
The analog to digital converter converts the received analog raw data into digital values.
Depending on the design of the device and the body part being imaged the patient is positioned inside the magnet (e.g. on a movable table or standing upright).
The MRI scan room is surrounded by a RF shield (Faraday cage).
In addition, a computer console, a display, and a film printer belong to the MRI equipment.

See also the related poll result: 'Most outages of your scanning system are caused by failure of'
Radiology-tip.comradCT Scanner,  Gamma Camera
spacer
Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.comUltrasound Machine
spacer
 
• Related Searches:
    • Gradient Coil
    • Amplifier
    • MRI Equipment
    • Faraday Shield
    • Legal Requirements
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Imaging Hardware
   by www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk    
  News & More:
Why non-magnetic capacitors matter in medical imaging
Wednesday, 19 February 2020   by www.medicaldesignandoutsourcing.com    
A transportable MRI machine to speed up the diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients
Wednesday, 22 April 2015   by medicalxpress.com    
Magnetic resonance angiography: current status and future directions
Wednesday, 9 March 2011   by www.jcmr-online.com    
Searchterm 'Analog' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
Radiology  (11) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (14) Open this link in a new window
Sampling
 
Conversion of the analog signal to a series of digital values by measurement at a set of particular times; this utilizes the analog to digital converter. If the rate of sampling is less than twice the highest frequency in the signal, aliasing will occur. The duration of sampling determines how small a difference of frequencies can be separated.

See also Aliasing.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Sampling' (45).Open this link in a new window

MRI Resources 
Examinations - Diffusion Weighted Imaging - Hospitals - Research Labs - Education - Movies
 
Absolute Zero
 
The lowest possible temperature that can be obtained, at which all molecular motion discontinues. The unit is written as 0 K or 0 Kelvin, named after William Thomson, who developed the scale and became Lord Kelvin in 1892.
The analogous temperature in other units is:
•
-273.16° Celsius
•
-459.69° Fahrenheit
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Absolute Zero' (6).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
After 100 Years of Debate, Hitting Absolute Zero Has Been Declared Mathematically Impossible
Wednesday, 15 March 2017   by www.sciencealert.com    
  News & More:
Physicists cool particles to less than a billionth of a degree above absolute zero to probe quantum magnetism
Monday, 5 September 2022   by cosmosmagazine.com    
Superfluid helium-4
Monday, 12 February 2018   by en.wikipedia.org    
Cooling MRI magnets without a continuous supply of scarce helium
Tuesday, 13 August 2013   by www.wired.co.uk    
Searchterm 'Analog' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
News  (2)  Resources  (1)  
 
BandwidthForum -
related threads
 
(BW) Bandwidth is a measure of frequency range, the range between the highest and lowest frequency allowed in the signal. For analog signals, which can be mathematically viewed as a function of time, bandwidth is the width, measured in Hertz of a frequency range in which the signal's Fourier transform is nonzero.
•
The receiver (or acquisition) bandwidth (rBW) is the range of frequencies accepted by the receiver to sample the MR signal. The receiver bandwidth is changeable (see also acronyms for 'bandwidth' from different manufacturers) and has a direct relationship to the signal to noise ratio (SNR) (SNR = 1/squareroot (rBW). The bandwidth depends on the readout (or frequency encoding) gradient strength and the data sampling rate (or dwell time).
Bandwidth is defined by BW = Sampling Rate/Number of Samples.
A smaller bandwidth improves SNR, but can cause spatial distortions, also increases the chemical shift. A larger bandwidth reduces SNR (more noise from the outskirts of the spectrum), but allows faster imaging.
•
The transmit bandwidth refers to the RF excitation pulse required for slice selection in a pulse sequence. The slice thickness is proportional to the bandwidth of the RF pulse (and inversely proportional to the applied gradient strength). Lowering the pulse bandwidth can reduce the slice thickness.
mri safety guidance
Image Guidance
A higher bandwidth is used for the reduction of chemical shift artifacts (lower bandwidth - more chemical shift - longer dwell time - but better signal to noise ratio). Narrow receive bandwidths accentuate this water fat shift by assigning a smaller number of frequencies across the MRI image. This effect is much more significant on higher field strengths. At 1.5 T, fat and water precess 220 Hz apart, which results in a higher shift than in Low Field MRI.
Lower bandwidth (measured in Hz) = higher water fat shift (measured in pixel shift).

See also Aliasing, Aliasing Artifact, Frequency Encoding, and Chemical Shift Artifact.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Bandwidth' (19).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Bandwidth
   by en.wikipedia.org    
  News & More:
Automated Quality Assurance for Magnetic Resonance Image with Extensions to Diffusion Tensor Imaging(.pdf)
   by scholar.lib.vt.edu    
A Real-Time Navigator Approach to Compensating for Motion Artifacts in Coronary Magnetic Resonance Angiography
   by www.cs.nyu.edu    
Searchterm 'Analog' was also found in the following services: 
spacer
Radiology  (11) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (14) Open this link in a new window
Chemical Shift ImagingInfoSheet: - Sequences - 
Intro, 
Overview, 
Types of, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Spectroscopy pool -
 
(CSI) Chemical shift imaging is an extension of MR spectroscopy, allowing metabolite information to be measured in an extended region and to add the chemical analysis of body tissues to the potential clinical utility of Magnetic Resonance. The spatial location is phase encoded and a spectrum is recorded at each phase encoding step to allow the spectra acquisition in a number of volumes covering the whole sample. CSI provides mapping of chemical shifts, analog to individual spectral lines or groups of lines.
Spatial resolution can be in one, two or three dimensions, but with long acquisition times od full 3D CSI. Commonly a slice-selected 2D acquisition is used. The chemical composition of each voxel is represented by spectra, or as an image in which the signal intensity depends on the concentration of an individual metabolite. Alternatively frequency-selective pulses excite only a single spectral component.
There are several methods of performing chemical shift imaging, e.g. the inversion recovery method, chemical shift selective imaging sequence, chemical shift insensitive slice selective RF pulse, the saturation method, spatial and chemical shift encoded excitation and quantitative chemical shift imaging.

See also Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy.
spacer

• View the DATABASE results for 'Chemical Shift Imaging' (6).Open this link in a new window

 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
1H MR Spectroscopy and Chemical Shift Imaging of the In Vivo Brain at 7 Tesla
Sunday, 26 November 2006   by tobias-lib.uni-tuebingen.de    
MRI evaluation of fatty liver in day to day practice: Quantitative and qualitative methods
Wednesday, 3 September 2014   by www.sciencedirect.com    
  News & More:
Spin echoes, CPMG and T2 relaxation - Introductory NMR & MRI from Magritek
2013   by www.azom.com    
mDIXON being developed to simplify and accelerate liver MRI
September 2010   by incenter.medical.philips.com    
MRI Resources 
Societies - MRI Technician and Technologist Jobs - Cardiovascular Imaging - MRI Technician and Technologist Schools - Abdominal Imaging - Stent
 
previous      6 - 10 (of 23)     next
Result Pages : [1]  [2 3 4 5]
 Random Page
 
Share This Page
FacebookTwitterLinkedIn

MR-TIP    
Community   
User
Pass
Forgot your UserID/Password ?    



MRI is trending to low field magnets :
reduced costs will lead to this change 
AI will close the gap to high field 
only in remote areas 
is only temporary 
never 

Look
      Ups





MR-TIP.com uses cookies! By browsing MR-TIP.com, you agree to our use of cookies.

Magnetic Resonance - Technology Information Portal
Member of SoftWays' Medical Imaging Group - MR-TIP • Radiology-TIP • Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging • 
Copyright © 2003 - 2024 SoftWays. All rights reserved. [ 2 May 2024]
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising
 [last update: 2024-02-26 03:41:00]