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2 - Physics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Peter R. Hoskins
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh
Kevin Martin
Affiliation:
University of Leicester
Abigail Thrush
Affiliation:
St Bartholomew's Hospital, London
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Summary

Introduction

Ultrasound is a high-frequency sound wave, which can be used to form images of internal body organs, as described briefly in the previous chapter. Ultrasound travels through the tissues of the body in a way which makes it possible to form useful images using relatively simple techniques, as described in Chapter 1. However, the image-formation process includes some approximations, which give rise to imperfections and limitations in the imaging system. In order to be able to use diagnostic ultrasound systems effectively and to be able to distinguish imperfections in the image from genuine diagnostic information, the user must have an appreciation of the basic principles of ultrasound propagation in tissue.

Waves

Transverse waves

A wave is a disturbance with a regularly repeating pattern, which travels from one point to another. A simple and familiar example is a wave on the surface of a pond caused by a stone being thrown into the water (Figure 2.1a). Here, water displaced by the stone causes a local change in the height of the water, which causes a change in height in the water immediately adjacent to it and so on. Hence a wave travels out from the point of entry of the stone. An important aspect of the nature of this wave is that it is only the disturbance which travels across the pond, and not the water.

Type
Chapter
Information
Diagnostic Ultrasound
Physics and Equipment
, pp. 4 - 22
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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