Imaging technique in which the image of a plane is built up from signals received from the whole plane. The data is collected simultaneously from an entire layer.
An MKS unit of energy expended over time or of angular momentum.
Definition: 1 planck is equal to 1 joulesecond (J * s) or about 0.7375 foot pound second (ft * lb * 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.
(PRESS) Point resolved spectroscopy is a multi echosingle shot technique to obtain spectral data. PRESS is a 90°-180°-180° (slice selective pulses) sequence. The 90° radio frequency pulse rotates the spins in the yx-plane, followed by the first 180° pulse (spin rotation in the xz-plane) and the second 180° pulse (spin rotation in the xy-plane), which gives the signal.
With the long echo times used in PRESS, there is a better visualization of metabolites with longer relaxation times. Many of the metabolites depicted by stimulated echo technique are not seen on point resolved spectroscopy, but PRESS is less susceptible to motion, diffusion, and quantum effects and has a better SNR than stimulated echo acquisition mode (STEAM).
(PSF) 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.