Lect2 PhysicsRadiography ch4 JM
Lect2 PhysicsRadiography ch4 JM
4426
Medical Imaging
Physics of Radiography
Based on Prince and Links, Medical Imaging Signals and Systems and
Lecture Notes by Prince. Figures are from the book.
Lecture Outline
• Atomic structure and ionization
• Particulate Radiation
– Focusing on energetic electron interaction
• EM Radiation
– Photoelectric
– Compton scattering
-> Likelihood of each phenomenon
– EM radiation measurement
– Attenuation of radiation
• Radiation Dosimetry
– Exposure, dose
12
– Ex: 6 C or C - 12
Ground state: electrons are in the lowest orbital shells and within the lowest
energy quantum states within each shell
Electronvolt (eV) is a unit of energy equal ~1.602×10−19 J. It is the amount of energy gained (or lost) by the
charge of a single electron moving across a 1-V electric potential difference -> 1 volt (= 1 J/C) multiplied by
the elementary charge (e, or ~1.602×10−19 C). 1 eV = 1.602×10−19 J.
Radiation Physics Yao Wang, NYU 6
Ionization and Excitation
• Ionization is “knocking” an electron out of an atom
– Creates a free electron + ion (an atom with +1 charge)
– Occurs when radiated with energy above the electron binding
energy
• Excitation is “knocking” an electron to a higher orbit
– When the radiation energy is lower than the binding energy
• After either ionization or excitation, an atom has higher
energy
Continuum E [keV]
hν 0
N 0.5
- M 3
- - - Kγ
-
- -K
L αβ 11
- Kβ
M L L-lines
- - - Kα
- K αβ γ 70
K-lines
[From Graber, Lecture Note for BMI1-FS05]
Radiation Physics Yao Wang, NYU 17
Different types of characteristics rays
From http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/quantum/xterm.html#c1
When the
incident
electron
collides with
a nucleus
– The affected atom produces characteristic x-ray, while outer electrons fill
the K-shell.
– Sometimes the characteristic x-ray transfers its energy to an outer
electron (called Auger electron)
• Both photo electron and Auger electron are energetic electrons that
can interact with the matter as discussed before
– The probability increases abruptly when the photon energy rises above
the binding energy of L-shell or K-shell electrons (so as to eject the
electrons), then begins to diminish
– Rationale behind the use of “contrast agent”
– Z numbers: soft tissue: 7.4 soft, bone: 13.8
– More contrast with low energy x-ray
– Photoelectric effect dominate over Compton scattering at low energy
N AZ
ED =
Wm
N A : Avogadro' s number (atoms/mole)
Z : atomic number (electrons/atom)
Wm : molecular weight (grams/mole)
• N: number of photons
• A: area
Radiation Physics Yao Wang, NYU 32
Measures of X-ray Beam: Energy Flow
When the
incident
electron
collides with
a nucleus
N0
{ x
S ( x; E ) = S 0 ( E ) exp − ∫ µ ( x' ; E )dx'
0
}
• In terms of intensity
∞
I = ∫ E ' S ( E ' )dE '
0
∞
0
{ 0
x
}
I ( x) = ∫ S 0 ( E ' ) E ' exp − ∫ µ ( x' ; E ' )dx' dE '
• SI unit: C/kg
• Common unit: Roentgen (R)
– 1 C/kg = 3876 R
– Wilhelm Roentgen: Discovered X-ray, 1895, Nobel Prize 1901
See Table 4.6 for the mass attenuation coefficient of typical materials
Deffective = ∑w H
organs
j j
• Radiation dosimetry
– Exposure vs. dose: D=fX
– Equivalent dose: H=DQ
– Effective dose: D
effective = ∑ w j H j
organs