
Proceedings Paper
Coded Apertures Derived From The Fresnel Zone PlateFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
Mertz and Young introduced the idea of using a Fresnel zone plate as a shadow-casting reticle, or coded aperture, in x-ray astronomy. More recently, considerable progress has been made toward using the zone-plate aperture for gamma-ray imaging in nuclear medicine. The most successful configuration has used an off-axis section of a zone plate in conjunction with a halftone screen. In this paper, we discuss a variety of closely related coded apertures, including an annulus, an inverted zone plate, a spiral zone plate and the Girard grill. In most cases, the technique of grid-coded subtraction is used to suppress the zero-order (DC) background light usually associated with zone-plate imaging. The first application of this technique, reported by Stoner et al., used a sequence of two to four on-axis zone plates. In the present paper it is shown that the method can be extended to other apertures and is also very useful in synthesizing the spatial filters for optical decoding.
Paper Details
Date Published: 1 March 1974
PDF: 15 pages
Proc. SPIE 0052, Coherent Optical Processing, (1 March 1974); doi: 10.1117/12.954186
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 0052:
Coherent Optical Processing
H. John Caulfield, Editor(s)
PDF: 15 pages
Proc. SPIE 0052, Coherent Optical Processing, (1 March 1974); doi: 10.1117/12.954186
Show Author Affiliations
H. H. Barrett, University of Arizona (United States)
W. W. Stoner, Machlett Labs (United States)
W. W. Stoner, Machlett Labs (United States)
D. T. Wilson, Raytheon Co. (United States)
G. D. DeMeester, Raytheon Co. (United States)
G. D. DeMeester, Raytheon Co. (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 0052:
Coherent Optical Processing
H. John Caulfield, Editor(s)
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