English

Ghost Tomography

Instrumentation and Detectors 2019-06-25 v1 Medical Physics

Abstract

Ghost tomography using single-pixel detection extends the emerging field of ghost imaging to three dimensions, with the use of penetrating radiation. In this work, a series of spatially random x-ray intensity patterns is used to illuminate a specimen in various tomographic angular orientations with only the total transmitted intensity being recorded by a single-pixel camera (or bucket detector). The set of zero-dimensional intensity readings, combined with knowledge of the corresponding two-dimensional illuminating patterns and specimen orientations, is sufficient for three-dimensional reconstruction of the specimen. The experimental demonstration of ghost tomography is presented here using synchrotron hard x-rays. This result expands the scope of ghost imaging to encompass volumetric imaging (i.e., tomography), of optically opaque objects using penetrating radiation. For hard x-rays, ghost tomography has the potential to decouple image quality from dose rate as well as image resolution from detector performance.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1806.01136,
  title  = {Ghost Tomography},
  author = {Andrew. M. Kingston and Daniele Pelliccia and Alexander Rack and Margie P. Olbinado and Yin Cheng and Glenn R. Myers and David M. Paganin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1806.01136},
  year   = {2019}
}