Publication | Open Access
Elemental biological imaging by differential absorption with a laser-produced x-ray source
51
Citations
11
References
1996
Year
Imaged Contrast AgentX-ray SpectroscopyEngineeringMicroscopyDifferential ImagingBiomedical EngineeringX-ray FluorescenceX-ray ImagingUtilizing TantalumRadiographyRadiation ImagingBiophysicsRadiologyHealth SciencesMedical ImagingBiophotonicsX-ray Free-electron LaserRadiographic ImagingLaser-produced X-ray SourceElemental Biological ImagingBiomedical ImagingDifferential AbsorptionX-ray Optic
We demonstrate the novel application of hard x rays emitted by a laser-produced plasma for differential imaging of elements. An x-ray-emitting laser-produced plasma, obtained by the focusing of radiation from a 10-Hz terawatt laser, is used for biological imaging. The x-ray source can be arranged to yield characteristic x-ray emission lines with photon energies that bridge the K absorption edge of a chosen atomic species. One can obtain element-specific radiographs by recording transillumination images for different target materials on digital image plates and by subsequently subtracting or dividing the images. Successful phantom and experimental animal imaging are performed utilizing tantalum and gadolinium as target materials for the terawatt laser and gadolinium as the imaged contrast agent.
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