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Optical Society of America Annual Meeting, 1991
A radically new method of tomographic image recording based on reduced coherence interferometry is presented. It has potential for 3-D x-ray imaging use. Previous attempts to produce 3-D x-ray imaging usually involved, in the case of computer assisted tomography,1 2-D projection images and heavy use of computers for data processing and display, thus ...
Tin M. Aye, Tomasz Jannson, Jay Hirsh
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A radically new method of tomographic image recording based on reduced coherence interferometry is presented. It has potential for 3-D x-ray imaging use. Previous attempts to produce 3-D x-ray imaging usually involved, in the case of computer assisted tomography,1 2-D projection images and heavy use of computers for data processing and display, thus ...
Tin M. Aye, Tomasz Jannson, Jay Hirsh
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Nondestructive Testing and Evaluation, 2005
This paper discusses issues related to the development of reconstructed tomography based on scattered X-ray radiation. For most X-ray tomography, based on collimated initial and scattered radiation, the distribution of the object density (linear scattering coefficient) is reconstructed by the number of counted photons scattered in the reconstructed ...
V. A. Gorshkov +3 more
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This paper discusses issues related to the development of reconstructed tomography based on scattered X-ray radiation. For most X-ray tomography, based on collimated initial and scattered radiation, the distribution of the object density (linear scattering coefficient) is reconstructed by the number of counted photons scattered in the reconstructed ...
V. A. Gorshkov +3 more
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2000
X-ray computed tomography (CT) is still a workhorse of neuroimaging despite the significant contributions to neurodiagnosis made by newer technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), and single proton emission CT (SPECT). Within only a few years of its introduction in 1972, by Geoffrey N.
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X-ray computed tomography (CT) is still a workhorse of neuroimaging despite the significant contributions to neurodiagnosis made by newer technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), and single proton emission CT (SPECT). Within only a few years of its introduction in 1972, by Geoffrey N.
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X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy: Towards reliable binding energy referencing
Progress in Materials Science, 2020Grzegorz Greczynski, Lars Hultman
exaly

