학술논문

Gamma camera imaging in an undergraduate physics course
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Physics - Medical Physics
Language
Abstract
Gamma camera imaging is an important technique in nuclear medicine. It is capable of diagnostic imaging of metabolically active areas and organ function, and it can be used to evaluate blood flow in the heart muscle, measure bone growth, detect tumors, and perform many other medical studies. It is a real world application that integrates concepts in medicine, nuclear physics, geometric optics, data processing, calibration, and image formation. This paper provides an overview of gamma camera imaging intended for an intermediate-level undergraduate physics course for students majoring in STEM disciplines. Because working with radioactive materials is not practical in our setting, we use an approach involving paper-and-pencil exercises, visible light apparatus, and computer work.
Comment: 30 pages including 10 figures. To appear in the Am. J. Physics around Jan. 2022. Supplementary materials will appear in AJP but have not been submitted to arXiv