Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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 'Sound Beam' p9
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Searchterm 'Sound Beam' found in 74 articles
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Focal Zone
The focal zone is the region within the transmitted sound beam in which the beam narrows to its minimum size. The lateral resolution is best within the focal zone of the beam.
Focus
In contrast enhanced ultrasound, the focus is the point at which maximum bubble destruction occur.
The transmit focus is the region on the axis of an ultrasound beam where the width of the beam has a minimum value. All waves crossing the focus are in phase in relation to the transducer surface or to the electronic summing point of an electronically focused array.
Frame Rate
The frame rate is the number of images displayed per second. One frame represents one complete sweep of the ultrasound beam and contains many pulse-listen cycles. The frame rates decrease with an increased dwell time.
Half-Value Layer
(HVL) The attenuation of ultrasound waves in human tissue is characterized as the half value layer, or the half power distance. Half value layer means the distance the sound beam will travel in a tissue before its amplitude or energy is attenuated to half its original value. Air and lung tissue have extremely short half-power distances and represent severe obstacles to the transmission of acoustic energy.
Huygens Principle
Huygens principle states that an expanding sphere of waves behaves as if each point on the wave front were a new source of radiation of the same frequency and phase. The principle explains how a flat ultrasound transducer can transmit a narrow ultrasound beam, which in the near field is confined to the dimensions of the transducer surface.
Spherical wavelets are emitted from numerous point sources on the transducer surface. They interfere to form a narrow, slightly converging beam of ultrasound in the near field. The wavefronts in the beam are nearly parallel. A precondition for this interference is that the transducer surface is much larger than the ultrasound wavelength.

See also Interference Artifact.
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