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Point source

About: Point source is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5077 publications have been published within this topic receiving 94091 citations.


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TL;DR: The results indicate that when the point source contrast is below a certain threshold, the measured full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) remains stable and once the contrast is above the threshold,The measured FWHM monotonically decreases with increasing point source Contrast, and also monotonic decreases with iteration number for maximum likelihood estimate.
Abstract: Spatial resolution is an important metric for performance characterization in PET systems. Measuring spatial resolution is straightforward with a linear reconstruction algorithm, such as filtered backprojection, and can be performed by reconstructing a point source scan and calculating the full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) along the principal directions. With the widespread adoption of iterative reconstruction methods, it is desirable to quantify the spatial resolution using an iterative reconstruction algorithm. However, the task can be difficult because the reconstruction algorithms are nonlinear and the non-negativity constraint can artificially enhance the apparent spatial resolution if a point source image is reconstructed without any background. Thus, it was recommended that a background should be added to the point source data before reconstruction for resolution measurement. However, there has been no detailed study on the effect of the point source contrast on the measured spatial resolution. Here we use point source scans from a preclinical PET scanner to investigate the relationship between measured spatial resolution and the point source contrast. We also evaluate whether the reconstruction of an isolated point source is predictive of the ability of the system to resolve two adjacent point sources. Our results indicate that when the point source contrast is below a certain threshold, the measured FWHM remains stable. Once the contrast is above the threshold, the measured FWHM monotonically decreases with increasing point source contrast. In addition, the measured FWHM also monotonically decreases with iteration number for maximum likelihood estimate. Therefore, when measuring system resolution with an iterative reconstruction algorithm, we recommend using a low-contrast point source and a fixed number of iterations.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived the necessary corrections using an observed spectrum of a fully extended source with the beam profile and considering the source's light profile, and applied these correction factors for sources with angular sizes up to θD ~ 17′′.
Abstract: The Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) on the European Space Agency’s Herschel Space Observatory utilizes a pioneering design for its imaging spectrometer in the form of a Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS). The standard FTS data reduction and calibration schemes are aimed at objects with either a spatial extent that is much larger than the beam size or a source that can be approximated as a point source within the beam. However, when sources are of intermediate spatial extent, neither of these calibrations schemes is appropriate and both the spatial response of the instrument and the source’s light profile must be taken into account and the coupling between them explicitly derived. To that end, we derive the necessary corrections using an observed spectrum of a fully extended source with the beam profile and considering the source’s light profile. We apply the derived correction to several observations of planets and compare the corrected spectra with their spectral models to study the beam coupling efficiency of the instrument in the case of partially extended sources. We find that we can apply these correction factors for sources with angular sizes up to θD ~ 17′′. We demonstrate how the angular size of an extended source can be estimated using the difference between the subspectra observed at the overlap bandwidth of the two frequency channels in the spectrometer, at 959 < ν < 989 GHz. Using this technique on an observation of Saturn, we estimate a size of 17.2′′, which is 3% larger than its true size on the day of observation. Finally, we show the results of the correction applied on observations of a nearby galaxy, M82, and the compact core of a Galactic molecular cloud, Sgr B2.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper proposes to first factor out the singularities of traveltimes, takeoff angles, and amplitudes, and then designs high-order Lax-Friedrichs sweeping schemes for point-source traveltime, takeoff angle, and Amplitudes.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic survey of extragalactic gamma-ray sky at the energies above 100 GeV using the data of Fermi telescope is presented, where the authors identify eight significant point source like excesses in this map.
Abstract: We construct a systematic survey of extragalactic \gamma-ray sky at the energies above 100 GeV using the data of Fermi telescope. Such survey has not been previously done by the ground-based Cherenkov gamma-ray telescopes which have, contrary to Fermi, narrow field of view. We study a map of arrival directions of the highest energy photons detected by Fermi at Galactic latitudes |b| > 10 degrees and search for significant point source like excesses above the diffuse Galactic and extragalactic \gamma-ray backgrounds. We identify eight significant point source like excesses in this map. Seven of the eight sources are known TeV blazars. The previously unknown source is identified with a head-tail radio galaxy IC 310, situated in Perseus cluster of galaxies. The source is detected with significance 6 sigma above 30 GeV. We identify two possible scenaria for gamma-ray emission from this source. One possibility is that emission originates from the base of relativistic outflow from the active nucleus, as in the BL Lacs and FR I type radio galaxies. Otherwise gamma-ray photons could be produced at the bow shock formed in result of fast motion of the galaxy through the intracluster medium. The two models could be distinguished via the study of variability of the \gamma-ray signal.

60 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202350
2022133
2021103
2020135
2019123
2018133