Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Non-Linear Imaging
Non-linear imaging is used to detect primary non-linear components of the received echo. Non-linear methods like harmonic imaging and pulse inversion imaging are designed to detect ultrasound contrast agents.

See also Contrast Pulse Sequencing, and Power Modulation.
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Non-Linear Propagation
The propagation of high amplitude ultrasound waves is inadequate described by a linear wave equation. Non-linear propagation is to expect if the power levels are high enough to make non-linear effects significant. A non-linear propagation results in the distortion of the transmitted waveforms, resulting in the generation of harmonics of the initial frequency components transmitted by the transducer.
In the near field of ultrasound probes, the occurring diffraction and focusing effects make this process complex. The distortion of a wavefront propagating in a medium in which the compressional phase moves slightly faster than the rarefactional phase, results is the conversion of some wave energy into higher harmonics of the fundamental frequency. The effect increases strongly with increasing wave amplitude.
• View DATABASE results for 'Non-Linear Propagation' (4).Open this link in a new window.
Non-Linear Scattering
Non-linear scattering describes in physics the conversion of a photon from one wavelength to one or more other wavelengths. In ultrasound, non-linear scattering is the generation of an echo containing higher harmonics. In the case of a microbubble, the oscillation is asymmetric with time, producing echoes with even harmonics.

See also Cross-section Scattering.
• View DATABASE results for 'Non-Linear Scattering' (4).Open this link in a new window.
Nyquist Frequency
The Nyquist frequency describes the highest frequency that can be sampled in a pulsed ultrasound system. To record higher frequencies the zero baseline can be shifted in the desired direction.

See also Nyquist Limit, and Sampling Rate.
• View DATABASE results for 'Nyquist Frequency' (2).Open this link in a new window.
Nyquist Limit
According to Shannon's sampling theorem, the sampling frequency should be twice the frequency being sampled. The nyquist frequency is the maximum frequency that can be sampled without aliasing. In ultrasound imaging, it is defined as half of the pulse repetition frequency.
NF = PRF/2 (nyquist frequency = pulse repetition frequency/2)
This is the so-called Nyquist limit. If the velocity of flow exceeds the Nyquist limit, the direction and velocity are inaccurately displayed and appear to change direction. Color flow Doppler capitalizes on this effect. This allows detecting flow disturbances from laminar to turbulent flow.

See also Aliasing Artifact, Repetition Rate, and Sampling Rate.
• View DATABASE results for 'Nyquist Limit' (4).Open this link in a new window.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 01:42:00]