Optical Tomography for Media with Variable Index of Refraction

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Abstract

Optical tomography is the use of near-infrared light to determine the optical absorption and scattering properties of a medium M âŠ‚ â„n. If the refractive index is constant throughout the medium, the steady-state case is modeled by the stationary linear transport equation in terms of the Euclidean metric and photons which do not get absorbed or scatter travel along straight lines. In this expository article we consider the case of variable refractive index where the dynamics are modeled by writing the transport equation in terms of a Riemannian metric; in the absence of interaction, photons follow the geodesics of this metric. The data
one has is the measurement of the out-going flux of photons leaving the body at the boundary. This may be knowledge of both the locations and directions of the exiting photons (fully angularly resolved measurements) or some kind of average over direction (angularly averaged measurements). We discuss the results known for both types of measurements in all spatial dimensions.

Keywords

Boltzmann equation , integral geometry , optical tomography , Riemannian metric , transport equation
  • Stephen McDowall Department of Mathematics, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, USA.
  • Pages: 71–97
  • Date Published: 2009-12-01
  • Vol. 11 No. 5 (2009): CUBO, A Mathematical Journal

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Published

2009-12-01

How to Cite

[1]
S. McDowall, “Optical Tomography for Media with Variable Index of Refraction”, CUBO, vol. 11, no. 5, pp. 71–97, Dec. 2009.