Affiliation:
1. Mayo Clinic
2. Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
3. University of California at Berkeley
Abstract
Optical imaging is an ancient branch of imaging dating back to
thousands of years. Radiographic imaging and tomography (RadIT),
including the first use of X-rays by Wilhelm Röntgen, and then, γ-rays, energetic charged particles,
neutrons, etc. are about 130 years
young. The synergies between optical and radiographic imaging can be
cast in the framework of these building blocks: Physics, Sources, Detectors, Methods, and Data Science, as described in Appl. Opt.
61, RDS1 (2022)APOPAI0003-693510.1364/AO.455628. Optical
imaging has expanded to include three-dimensional (3D) tomography
(including holography), due in to part the invention of optical
(including infrared) lasers. RadIT are intrinsically 3D because of the
penetrating power of ionizing radiation. Both optical imaging and
tomography (OIT) and RadIT are evolving into even higher dimensional
regimes, such as time-resolved tomography (4D) and temporarily and
spectroscopically resolved tomography (4D+). Further advances in OIT and RadIT
will continue to be driven by desires for higher information yield,
higher resolutions, and higher probability models with reduced
uncertainties. Synergies in quantum physics, laser-driven sources,
low-cost detectors, data-driven methods, automated processing of data,
and artificially intelligent data acquisition protocols will be
beneficial to both branches of imaging in many applications. These
topics, along with an overview of the Radiography, Applied Optics, and
Data Science virtual feature issue, are discussed here.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy