ICM'98
Natterer: The Mathematics of Imaging in Medicine and Technology
In 1917 the mathematician Radon published a paper on recovering a
function in the plane from the values of its line integrals. In 1979 the
engineer Hounsfield and the physicist Cormack received the Nobel price in
medicine for the invention of computerized tomography (CT), a radiological
imaging technique which provides cross sectional images of the human body. The
mathematical principle behind CT is exactly the problem studied and solved
by Radon.
In the talk we explain and visualize Radon's result and the imaging
algorithms based on it. We also describe the mathematical background for novel
imaging techniques such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and emission
tomography (PET and SPECT). Finally we show how these techniques are being
applied to various problems in science and technology.
ICM'98 homepage
Please send suggestions and corrections to: pahlig@zib.de
Last modified: July 21, 1998