Radiology - Technology Information Portal
Thursday, 21 November 2024
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P,-Pa Pa-Ph Ph-Ph Ph-Pi Pi-Po Po-Po Po-Pr Pr-Pu
Pitch
(p) The pitch (in computed tomography) is the ratio of the patient table increment to the total nominal beam width for the CT scan. The pitch factor relates the volume coverage speed to the thinnest sections that can be reconstructed. In spiral CT, dose is always inversely proportional to pitch.
Among the different manufacturers, there are various definitions of pitch depending on whether a single-detector (single-slice) or multi-detector (multi-slice) CT scanner is used.
For a single-slice helical scanner the pitch is:
Pitch = table movement per rotation/slice collimation.
The international standard formula (by the IEC) is:
Pitch = TF (table feed in mm per 360° rotation)/(N (number of detector rows) x SC (slice collimation in mm))
• View DATABASE results for 'Pitch' (4).Open this link in a new window.
Pitch Factor
The pitch factor is a selectable CT parameter. The definition depending on the IEC standards is the ratio of the table speed per rotation and the total collimation.
The choice of pitch factor is determined on practical considerations and on the availability of the computed tomography algorithms and parameters for image reconstruction.

See Pitch.
• View DATABASE results for 'Pitch Factor' (2).Open this link in a new window.
Pixel
A pixel is a picture element (pix, abbreviation of pictures + element). Tomographic images are composed of several pixels; the pixel size is determined by the used field of view and the number of elements in the display image matrix. The corresponding size of the pixel may be smaller than the actual spatial resolution.
Pixels do not have a fixed size; their diameters are generally measured in micrometers (microns). Although the pixel is not a unit of measurement itself, pixels are often used to measure the resolution (or sharpness) of images. As a hypothetical example, a 600 x 1000 pixel image has 4 times the pixel density and is thus 4 times sharper than a 300 x 500 pixel image, assuming the two images have the same physical size.
• View DATABASE results for 'Pixel' (15).Open this link in a new window.
Planck
Planck is a MKS unit of energy (expended over time to angular momentum, etc.). One Planck unit is equal to 1 joule second (J x s) or about 0.7375 foot pound second (ft x lb x s). Atomic nuclei possess an intrinsic angular momentum referred to as spin, measured in multiples of Planck's constant. The unit is named for the German physicist Max Planck.
• View DATABASE results for 'Planck' (4).Open this link in a new window.
Point Spread Function
(PSF) The point spread function describes the response of an imaging system to a point or impulse input. A hypothetical point object will generally have an extended (blurred) image resulting from the imaging process; this is the point spread function characterizing the imaging process. Considering any object as composed of an assembly of point objects, knowledge of the PSF permits the prediction of how the object will be imaged, assuming linearity of the imaging process.

See also Resolution, Phantom and Daily Quality Assurance.
• View DATABASE results for 'Point Spread Function' (2).Open this link in a new window.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 02:01:00]