AN ANALYTICAL INVERSION OF THE 180° EXPONENTIAL RADON TRANSFORM WITH A NUMERICALLY GENERATED KERNEL

2007 ◽  
Vol 07 (01) ◽  
pp. 71-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
QIU HUANG ◽  
GENGSHENG L. ZENG ◽  
GRANT T. GULLBERG

This work presents an inversion algorithm for the exponential Radon transform (ERT) over 180° range of view angles. The algorithm can be applied to two-dimensional parallel beam geometry in single photon emission computed tomography. First the differentiation of the ERT over π is backprojected. A convolutional relation between this backprojected differentiation and the original image is then established. In order to invert the convolution relation, the least-squares method is utilized to obtain a numerically generated filtering kernel, which readily restores the original image. The advantages of the proposed algorithm are, first, it only requires half the view angles of the conventional inversion algorithm, second, it deals with truncation in ERT data in certain situations, and third, the numerically generated filtering kernel can be pre-calculated and stored for later applications. The algorithm is an analytical approach except for the pre-calculated inverse kernel.

2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
pp. 45-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.S Fokas ◽  
A Iserles ◽  
V Marinakis

The modern imaging techniques of positron emission tomography and of single photon emission computed tomography are not only two of the most important tools for studying the functional characteristics of the brain, but they now also play a vital role in several areas of clinical medicine, including neurology, oncology and cardiology. The basic mathematical problems associated with these techniques are the construction of the inverse of the Radon transform and of the inverse of the so-called attenuated Radon transform, respectively. An exact formula for the inverse Radon transform is well known, whereas that for the inverse attenuated Radon transform was obtained only recently by R. Novikov. The latter formula was constructed by using a method introduced earlier by R. Novikov and the first author in connection with a novel derivation of the inverse Radon transform. Here, we first show that the appropriate use of that earlier result yields immediately an analytic formula for the inverse attenuated Radon transform. We then present an algorithm for the numerical implementation of this analytic formula, based on approximating the given data in terms of cubic splines. Several numerical tests are presented which suggest that our algorithm is capable of producing accurate reconstruction for realistic phantoms such as the well-known Shepp–Logan phantom.


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