Event

OMPI Seminar - Nathan Murtha and Peter Raaphorst

Thursday, October 21, 2021
15:30-17:00
Zoom meeting

PRESENTATIONS (2)

 

Resident presentation:

“Reconstruction of a radioactive source distribution using a tomographic spatial unfolding method with Compton gamma imager measurements”

Advanced detection and reconstruction techniques are utilized to characterize the distribution of radioactive materials in radiological safety and security operations. Most radioactive materials can be detected through their gamma-ray emissions. There can arise circumstances in which the measurement of these gamma rays must be made from behind a pre-established perimeter, however. To address this, Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) have jointly developed novel Compton gamma imaging technology for use in safety and security applications. Compton gamma imaging utilizes the physics of Compton scattering to locate gamma-ray sources, making the technology well-suited to localization at a distance from the suspected source.

A fast tomographic reconstruction method has been developed for use with Compton gamma imaging measurements to provide rapid, in situ source localization. For a more precise offline reconstruction of the data, a spatial unfolding technique has also been developed that fits the observed experimental tomogram with tomographic response templates produced by Monte Carlo simulation of spatially-localized sources of radioactivity.

These methods have been applied to two sets of experimental data using measurements acquired with the detector developed by NRCan and the NRC. In one experiment, measurements of a Cs-137 point source were acquired in a laboratory setting. In a second experiment, measurements of a spatially-extended La-140 source were acquired in realistic outdoor operational conditions. The tomographic reconstruction of the sources takes only minutes and demonstrates good localization capability. The spatial-unfolding method shows good localization of experimentally-measured sources but underestimates their activity, while accurately recovering the activity of synthetic sources. The underestimation of experimentally-measured source activities is ascribed to limitations in the simulated representation of the detector response and environmental terrain not included in the simulated world.

The simple tomographic reconstruction method will be useful in guiding radiological safety and security operations in near real-time. The post-process unfolding method will further be useful in informing follow-on consequence management operations and remediation activities.

By Dr Nathan Murtha

Tom Baker Cancer Centre, Alberta, Canada

 


Member presentation:

“Canadian bone mineral density program; bones, measurement technology, quality control, precision and patient results”

In this presentation I will discuss bone physiology, the measurement of bone mineral density and show the implications of aging, leading to bone degeneration resulting in debilitation and risk of death. I will also present the difficulty and challenges in measuring bone mineral density, the complexity of patient scanning in clinical practice and quality control. The problems discovered and corrected in such scanning programs will be discussed with their implications to patient care.

By Dr Peter Raaphorst

Department of Physics, Carleton University

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