MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)
- When protons (here brain protons) are placed in a magnetic field, they become
capable of receiving and then transmitting electromagnetic energy. The strength
of the transmitted energy is proportional to the number of protons in the
tissue. Signal strength is modified by properties of each proton's microenvironment,
such as its mobility and the local homogeneity of the magnetic field. MR signal
can be "weighted" to accentuate some properties and not others.
When an additional magnetic field is superimposed, one which is carefully
varied in strength at different points in space, each point in space has a
unique radio frequency at which the signal is received and transmitted. This
makes constructing an image possible. It represents the spatial encoding of
frequency, just like a piano. (example).
See Brain
Imaging