Quantum 3D FFT in Tomography

被引:0
|
作者
Koukiou, Georgia [1 ]
Anastassopoulos, Vassilis [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Patras, Phys Dept, Elect Lab, Patras 26504, Greece
来源
APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL | 2023年 / 13卷 / 06期
关键词
Quantum Fourier Transform; quantum circuits; tomography; radon transform; quantum 3D back projection; ALGORITHMS;
D O I
10.3390/app13064009
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The Radon transform constitutes the conventional tool for tomosynthesis, i.e., the composition of cross-sections of an object from its projections. It is actually a version of the Fourier Transform, which is accompanied by the appropriate digital high pass filters for correct distribution of energy among the reconstructed frequency components. The Radon transform and its inverse are employed in their 2D and 3D versions, respectively, and the whole procedure is verified by the a priori known cross-sections to be reconstructed (known fandom). Usually, 3D medical image cubes, which are to be reconstructed, require powerful computational tools since the 2D projections are of high-resolution containing millions of pixels. Although the 3D FFT is very fast, the large number of projections will result in a 3D spectrum of very large dimensions. Inverting this spectrum with the inverse 3D FFT is extremely time consuming. In this work, the implementation of the 2D Radon transform using the 2D Quantum Fourier Transform is analytically presented. Simultaneously, its inverse version is realized by means of the Quantum inverse 3D FFT. For this purpose, a review of the necessary quantum computational units is presented for the implementation of the quantum 3D FFT and simultaneously simple examples of tomosynthesis are given by means of the quantum version of the 2D Radon transform and its inverse 3D counterpart. The whole procedure of the quantum tomosynthesis is analytically described.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] An FFT accelerated IRBC for 3D rough surface scattering
    Key Laboratory of Wave Scattering and Remote Sensing Information, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
    Beijing Youdian Daxue Xuebao, 2009, 1 (77-80):
  • [12] 3D Imaging with Holographic Tomography
    Sheppard, Cohn J. R.
    Kou, Shan Shan
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED PHASE MEASUREMENT METHODS IN OPTICS AN IMAGING, 2010, 1236 : 65 - 69
  • [13] Tomography Imaging in the 3D space
    Polakowski, Krzysztof
    PRZEGLAD ELEKTROTECHNICZNY, 2010, 86 (03): : 247 - 251
  • [14] 3D Terahertz Computed Tomography
    Kim, Geun-Ju
    Kim, Jung-Il
    Jeon, Seok-Gy
    Kim, Jaehong
    2012 37TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFRARED, MILLIMETER, AND TERAHERTZ WAVES (IRMMW-THZ), 2012,
  • [15] 3D Acoustic Atmospheric Tomography
    Rogers, Kevin
    Finn, Anthony
    REMOTE SENSING OF CLOUDS AND THE ATMOSPHERE XIX AND OPTICS IN ATMOSPHERIC PROPAGATION AND ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS XVII, 2014, 9242
  • [16] Efficient sampling in 3D tomography
    Desbat, L
    THREE-DIMENSIONAL IMAGE RECONSTRUCTION IN RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 1996, 4 : 87 - 99
  • [17] FIRST RESULTS ON THE COMPUTATION OF TERRAIN CORRECTIONS BY THE 3D FFT METHOD
    PENG, M
    LI, YC
    SIDERIS, MG
    MANUSCRIPTA GEODAETICA, 1995, 20 (06): : 475 - 488
  • [18] A FAST IE-FFT SOLUTION OF 3D COATING SCATTERERS
    Yin, Jiliang
    Hu, Jun
    Que, Xiaofeng
    Nie, Zaiping
    MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 2010, 52 (01) : 241 - 244
  • [19] Comparison of Glenoid Dimensions Between 3D Computed Tomography and 3D Printing
    Yiannakopoulos, Christos
    Vlastos, Iakovos
    Koutserimpas, Christos
    Gianzina, Elina
    Dellis, Spilios
    Kalinterakis, Georgios
    CUREUS JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2024, 16 (01)
  • [20] Saliency Detection for Videos Using 3D FFT Local Spectra
    Long, Zhiling
    AlRegib, Ghassan
    HUMAN VISION AND ELECTRONIC IMAGING XX, 2015, 9394