'Quadrature Detection' Searchterm 'Quadrature Detection' found in 3 articles 1 term [ • ] - 2 definitions [• ] Result Pages : • Quadrature Detection
Quadrature detection is used in Doppler ultrasound as well as in magnetic resonance imaging and is also called quadrature demodulation or phase quadrature technique. Quadrature detection is the acquisition of Mx and My simultaneously as a function of time by using two separate detector channels. This signal processing method is used for directional Doppler in which the signal reference frequency for the two channels has a phase shift of 1/4 period. The output Doppler signal phase for both channels also depends on the Doppler shift whether positive or negative. The fast Fourier transform analyzer performs spectral Doppler analysis in ultrasound machines and displays different quadrature Doppler frequencies, when a sample volume cursor is used along time. •
(DCPD) Directional color power Doppler combines power (amplitude) of Doppler signal with directional (phase) information to encode direction and variations in blood flow. DCPD is used in analysis of blood flow to assess blood vessel or vascular function. See also Color Power Doppler, Quadrature Detection, and Directional Indicators. •
Christian Johann Doppler first described the effect of motion of sound sources and the frequency change of the sound to the observer. Doppler ultrasound uses this effect to detect and measure blood flow, and the major reflector is the red blood cell. Doppler ultrasound depends on the fact that if the reflecting surface is moving in relation to the transducer (blood flowing in a vessel) the frequency of the received ultrasound wave will be different from that of the transmitted wave. If blood cells are moving towards the transducer, they increase the frequency of the returning signal. As cells move away from the transducer, the frequency of the returning signal decreases. See also Quadrature Detection and Doppler Techniques. Further Reading: News & More:
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