Reconstruction from projections
The problem of reconstructing a multidimensional signal from its projection is uniquely multidimensional, having no 1-D counterpart. It has applications that range from computer-aided tomography to geophysical signal processing. It is a problem which can be explored from several points of view—as a deconvolution problem, a modeling problem, an estimation problem, or an interpolation problem.
Motivation and applications
The problem of reconstruction from projections has arisen independently in a large number of scientific fields, since it is widely applied in areas such as medical imaging, geophysical tomography, industrial radiography and so on. For example, by using CT scanner, the lesion information of the patients can be presented in 3D on the computer, which offers a new and accurate approach in diagnosis and thus has vital clinical value.Problem statement and basics
A projection is a linear mapping of an dimensional signal into an dimensional one, where. And the objective of reconstruction is to restore the dimensional signal based on the dimensional signal. The following case is a 2-D signal projected into 1D signal.The signal in the original coordinate is denoted as. Now consider a collimated beam of radiation coming from the opposite orientation of, producing a projection along. and are normal to each other, and the angle between and is theta. The signal obtained along axis is defined to be. The relationship between the original coordinate and the rotated coordinate is given by
or inversely,
Then we have
By varying theta, a large number of projections can be obtained.
Given the projection-slice theorem,,the slice of the Fourier transform of at angle theta, is equivalent to, the Fourier Transform of the projection. Therefore, the unknown can be obtained from its Fourier transform by means of the Fourier transform inversion integral
By taking the inverse Fourier Transform and assuming, we get