The Gibbs or ringing
artifact appears as a series of lines in the MR image parallel to abrupt and intense changes in the object at this location. This
artifact does not occur visibly on smooth objects. This
artifact is caused by the
Gibbs phenomenon, an overshoot or ringing of Fourier series occurring at discontinuities.
In the spinal cord, a small syrinx can be simulated by the
Gibbs phenomenon. Gibbs artifacts are also seen in other regions, for example the
brain//skull interface.
Fine lines visible in an image may be due to
undersampling of the high spatial frequencies, respectively incomplete
digitization of the
echo.
With more encoding steps the Gibbs artifacts is less intense and narrower. Therefore, e.g. the
artifact is more intense in the 256 point dimension of a 256x512
acquisition matrix.