Title: M R I Physics Course
1M R I Physics Course
- Jerry Allison Ph.D., Chris Wright B.S.,
- Tom Lavin B.S., Nathan Yanasak Ph.D.
- Department of Radiology
- Medical College of Georgia
2 M R I Physics course Chapter 2 Basic Physical
Properties Magnetism Resonance
The M and R in MRI.
3Magnetism Magnetized objects exert forces of
repulsion or attraction on one another, resulting
from electric currents.
3
4Magnetic Properties
- All substances are magnetic (to various degrees).
- Magnetic susceptibility is the ability of a
substance to become magnetized.
Q If all substances are magnetic, do all
substances have electric currents running
in them? A Well examine this question shortly
4
5Magnetic Properties (continued)
- External field is applied ? object becomes
magnetized, according to susceptibility.
- Most standard materials fall into one of these
classes (defined by the susceptibility) - Diamagnetic
- Paramagnetic
- Super-paramagnetic
- Ferromagnetic
5
6Magnetic Properties (continued)
- Diamagnetic - develop a small magnetic field in
opposition to an applied field (and have a small
negative magnetic susceptibility). - Non-Magnetic - very weakly diamagnetic
No field applied
Field applied
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7Magnetic Properties (continued)
- Paramagnetic-develop a small magnetic field in
alignment with an applied field (and have a small
positive magnetic susceptibility). - Super-paramagnetism is ascribed to small
particles of iron oxide that can be used as MRI
contrast agents.
No field applied
Field applied
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8Magnetic Properties (continued)
- Ferromagnetic - strongly paramagnetic Fe, Co, Ni,
Gd. Magnetism induced by an applied magnetic
field may be retained. Ferromagnetic substances
have a strong positive magnetic susceptibility.
No field applied
Field applied
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9Magnetic Properties (continued)
- Stainless Steel can be ferromagnetic (exterior
surface of the downtown VAMC) or non-magnetic
(most surgical steel) depending upon the
particular alloy (Fe, Cr, Ni, Mn). Fortunately,
most (not all) surgical appliances (staples,
clips, etc.) are an alloy that is non-magnetic.
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10Induced Magnetism
- A ferromagnetic substance in an applied magnetic
field will develop a magnetic field hundreds of
times as strong as the applied field. A
spherical iron ball at a distance of 1.6 m from
a 1.0 T unshielded magnet will experience equal
attractive forces from gravity and the magnet.
This phenomenon is the basis for the projectile
hazards in MRI.
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11Induced Magnetism (continued)
- An electrical conductor wrapped around a
ferromagnetic iron rod induces a very useful
magnetic field when an electric current is
flowing Electromagnets, Transformers, and
Motors have iron cores. The induced field is
much larger than the magnetic field created by
the current flow in the conductor.
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12Magnetism in Our World
- Magnetic fields are all around us
- Average field in Milky Way 5x10-6 Gauss
- Average field in Solar Wind 5x10-5 Gauss
- Average field at Moon 1x10-2 Gauss
- Average field at Jupiter 2x104 Gauss
- 1 Tesla 10,000 Gauss 1x104 Gauss
- 1 T 10,000 G
12
13Magnetism in Our World (continued)
- The Earths magnetic field is 0.5 - 1.0 Gauss at
15 with axis of Earths rotation. - A 1.5 Tesla (15,000 Gauss) field is 15,000 to
30,000 times greater than the Earths magnetic
field.
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14Origins of Magnetism
- Stationary electrical charges have an electric
field (E-field). - Moving electrical charges develop a magnetic
field (B-field). - The basis for ALL MAGNETISM is the motion of
electrical charges.
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15Relationship of E- and B-fields
Stationary observer of stationary charge sees
E-field
B
E
E
Stationary observer of moving charge also sees
B-field
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16Relationship of E- and B-fields
- Because of the inseparability of electric charges
and magnetism, we refer to these phenomena in
general as Electromagnetism. - Phenomena of stationary charges ?
Electrostatics
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17Remember an accelerating or decelerating point
electric charge radiates electromagnetic
radiation.
Acceleration of electrons as they are deflected
by the nucleus of a tungsten atom in the target
produces Bremsstrahlung photons for diagnostic
x-ray applications.
tungsten target on X-ray tube anode
high speed electron
Bremsstrahlung photon
17
18Electric Fields (in this case, an electrostatic
field)
Stationary Point Electrical Charges
Electric Field Lines (arrows) represent
the direction of the fields
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19Origins of Magnetism (continued)
- The right hand rule describes the direction of
the magnetic field relative to the direction of
movement of electric charges.
Thumb direction of positive charges
Fingers direction of magnetic field
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20Magnetic Fields
A moving point electric charge develops a
magnetic field
Movement of a positive particle into the page
Movement of a positive particle out of the page
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21Magnetic Fields
A moving point electric charge develops a
magnetic field
-
-
Movement of an electron into the page
Movement of an electron out of the page
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22Direction of magnetic field depends on 1)
particle charge, and 2) direction of motion.
Movement of a positive particle out of the page
Movement of a positive particle into the page
-
-
-
-
Movement of an electron out of the page
Movement of an electron into the page
22
23Topology of B-field
B
E
B
Charges moving in straight lines form circular
field.
Charges moving in a circle form a linear field in
the center of circle.
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24Magnetic Properties
Q If all substances are magnetic, do all
substances have electric currents running in
them? Lets examine this question
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25All Observable Matter is Composed of
Subatomic Particles
electrons mass 0.0005 amu charge -1
electrostatic unit(esu)
protons mass 1.0 amu charge 1 esu
neutrons mass 1.0 amu charge neutral
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26Nucleons (or protons, neutrons) are composed of
charged quarks
Proton 2 Up quarks (2/3 esu) and 1 Down quark
(-1/3 esu) 1 esu net charge
-
Neutron 2 Down quarks (-1/3 esu) and 1 Up quark
(2/3 esu) no net charge
-
-
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27Magnetic Properties
Subatomic particles have a property called
spin. They behave as if they are spinning on
their axis. So, lets think about little regions
on the surface of the particle, shown as boxes.
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28Magnetic Properties
Each box contains charged particle
material. Therefore, as the particle rotates,
the boxes act like moving charges. So, our
particle behaves like a collection of currents,
and we generate a magnetic field.
B
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29Spinning of the subatomic particles generates a
magnetic field, called a magnetic moment or
magnetic dipole.
Electron magnetic moment
Proton magnetic moment
Neutron magnetic moment
For both protons and neutrons, the spinning of
the charged quarks produces the magnetic moment.
So, although the neutron is electrically
neutral, its spinning quarks give it a magnetic
moment.
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30Magnetic Properties
Q If all substances are magnetic, do all
substances have electric currents running in
them? A Yes, at the subatomic level. But the
currents are a result of particle spin.
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31Resonance
Stimulated oscillation at the natural or normal
frequency
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32A Classical demonstration using tuning forks
Tuning Fork 1
Tuning Fork 2
E
E
Sound waves from tuning fork 1 stimulate a
non-vibrating tuning fork 2, with same resonant
frequency, to RESONATE. It will absorb and give
off energy readily at this frequency.
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33Tuned string
Tuning Fork 1
The same is true of a guitar string tuned to the
frequency of the tuning fork. But, if you detune
the string, it will (essentially) not resonate
anymore.
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34Resonance (cont.)
In MRI, resonance relates to the stimulation of
proton magnetic moments (hydrogen nuclei) by RF
energy of the appropriate resonant
frequency. So, the protons will readily absorb
and release RF energy at this frequency. The
resonant frequency is tunable by the strength
of the magnetic field in which the protons are
spinning, as we shall see in a later lecture.
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35Radio Frequency Energy
- (RF) - oscillating magnetic and electric fields
(I.e., electromagnetic fields) having
frequencies between 3 kilohertz (kHz) and 30
Gigahertz (GHz). - Examples
- Radio waves(AM 535-1605 kHz FM 88-108 MHz)
- MRI (21,43,64,128 MHz?protons in 0.5,1T,1.5T,3T
lower for spectroscopy) - Cellphones (824-848 MHz)
- TV transmission (50-900 MHz Ch.2-4 ? 54-72 MHz)
- Microwave Ovens (2.45 GHz)
- Radar (3-30 GHz)
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36Radio Frequency Energy
- In MRI, magnetic fields oscillating at the
appropriate resonant frequency are used to
stimulate nuclei to either absorb energy or to
release energy (spin flip transitions phase
coherence).
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37Summary
- All magnetism originates in the movement of
electric charge. - Magnetic susceptibility describes to what extent
a material increases or decreases an applied
magnetic field. - Resonance periodic stimulation at the natural
frequency can cause energy exchange.
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