M. LenoxJames WiskinMatthew A. LewisStephen DarrouzetD.T. BorupScott S. Hsieh
Quantitative Transmission Ultrasound (QTUS) is a tomographic transmission ultrasound modality that is capable of generating 3D speed-of-sound maps of objects in the field of view. It performs this measurement by propagating a plane wave through the medium from a transmitter on one side of a water tank to a high resolution receiver on the opposite side. This information is then used via inverse scattering to compute a speed map. In addition, the presence of reflection transducers allows the creation of a high resolution, spatially compounded reflection map that is natively coregistered to the speed map. A prototype QTUS system was evaluated for measurement and geometric accuracy as well as for the ability to correctly determine speed of sound.
Bilal MalikRobin TerryJames WiskinM. Lenox
James S.M. YehCharles A. SennogaMcConnell EllenRobert J. EckersleyMeng‐Xing TangSussan NoursharghJohn M. SeddonDorian O. HaskardPetros Nihoyannopoulos
Iván M. Rosado-MéndezTimothy J. Hall
Ernest J. FeleppaJonathan MamouChristopher R. PorterJunji Machi
Paul E. BarboneJeffrey C. Bamber