Diode Array Camera Tubes and X-ray Imaging

1969 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur N. Chester ◽  
Thomas C. Loomis ◽  
M. M. Weiss
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 165-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur N. Chester ◽  
Fred B. Koch

AbstractThe silicon diode array camera tube, recently developed for PICTURFPHONE® service, was modified to permit X-ray imaging. High quantum efficiency is attained without the use of a phosphor screen, since each photon absorbed in the silicon target generates several hundred hole-electron pairs for each keV of its energy, most of which can he usefully collected. The sensitivity and resolution are adequate to allow a continuous television display of the diffracted intensity as a crystal is oriented. Particular advantages of this technique include; high resolution (< 25 μm); electronically variable magnification; direct oscilloscope measurement of X-ray spot Intensity profiles and relative spot intensities because signal current is directly proportional to photon flux; high sensitivity in the range of 0.6 to 5.0 Å, potentially limited only "by counting statistics; integration times variable from < 1/60 second to minutes; and expected low cost, since the camera tube has no complicated electron imaging, and is directly interchangeable Mith a standard television vidicon. Applications which are described include crystal orientation and X-ray topography.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Cunningham ◽  
B. B. Hobbs ◽  
R. K. Gerson ◽  
A. Fenster ◽  
Samuel J. Dwyer III ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
M.G. Baldini ◽  
S. Morinaga ◽  
D. Minasian ◽  
R. Feder ◽  
D. Sayre ◽  
...  

Contact X-ray imaging is presently developing as an important imaging technique in cell biology. Our recent studies on human platelets have demonstrated that the cytoskeleton of these cells contains photondense structures which can preferentially be imaged by soft X-ray imaging. Our present research has dealt with platelet activation, i.e., the complex phenomena which precede platelet appregation and are associated with profound changes in platelet cytoskeleton. Human platelets suspended in plasma were used. Whole cell mounts were fixed and dehydrated, then exposed to a stationary source of soft X-rays as previously described. Developed replicas and respective grids were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM).


Author(s):  
James F. Mancuso ◽  
William B. Maxwell ◽  
Russell E. Camp ◽  
Mark H. Ellisman

The imaging requirements for 1000 line CCD camera systems include resolution, sensitivity, and field of view. In electronic camera systems these characteristics are determined primarily by the performance of the electro-optic interface. This component converts the electron image into a light image which is ultimately received by a camera sensor.Light production in the interface occurs when high energy electrons strike a phosphor or scintillator. Resolution is limited by electron scattering and absorption. For a constant resolution, more energy deposition occurs in denser phosphors (Figure 1). In this respect, high density x-ray phosphors such as Gd2O2S are better than ZnS based cathode ray tube phosphors. Scintillating fiber optics can be used instead of a discrete phosphor layer. The resolution of scintillating fiber optics that are used in x-ray imaging exceed 20 1p/mm and can be made very large. An example of a digital TEM image using a scintillating fiber optic plate is shown in Figure 2.


Author(s):  
Ann LeFurgey ◽  
Peter Ingram ◽  
J.J. Blum ◽  
M.C. Carney ◽  
L.A. Hawkey ◽  
...  

Subcellular compartments commonly identified and analyzed by high resolution electron probe x-ray microanalysis (EPXMA) include mitochondria, cytoplasm and endoplasmic or sarcoplasmic reticulum. These organelles and cell regions are of primary importance in regulation of cell ionic homeostasis. Correlative structural-functional studies, based on the static probe method of EPXMA combined with biochemical and electrophysiological techniques, have focused on the role of these organelles, for example, in maintaining cell calcium homeostasis or in control of excitation-contraction coupling. New methods of real time quantitative x-ray imaging permit simultaneous examination of multiple cell compartments, especially those areas for which both membrane transport properties and element content are less well defined, e.g. nuclei including euchromatin and heterochromatin, lysosomes, mucous granules, storage vacuoles, microvilli. Investigations currently in progress have examined the role of Zn-containing polyphosphate vacuoles in the metabolism of Leishmania major, the distribution of Na, K, S and other elements during anoxia in kidney cell nuclel and lysosomes; the content and distribution of S and Ca in mucous granules of cystic fibrosis (CF) nasal epithelia; the uptake of cationic probes by mltochondria in cultured heart ceils; and the junctional sarcoplasmic retlculum (JSR) in frog skeletal muscle.


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