First experimental study of multiple orientation muon tomography, with image optimization in sparse data environments
Jesus J. Valencia (1), Adam A. Hecht (1), C. L. Morris (2), E., Guardincerri (2), D. Poulson (2), J. Bacon (2), J. M. Durham (2) ((1), Department of Nuclear Engineering, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM,, USA, (2) Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA)

TL;DR
This paper presents the first experimental study of multiple orientation muon tomography, demonstrating improved imaging in sparse data environments by combining depth-of-field reconstructions with rotating detectors.
Contribution
It introduces an experimental multi-orientation muon tomography method and compares depth-of-field reconstruction to traditional approaches, enhancing imaging with limited data.
Findings
Multi-orientation data improves image quality.
Depth-of-field reconstruction outperforms inverse Radon transform in sparse data.
Fewer orientations are needed for effective imaging.
Abstract
Due to the high penetrating power of cosmic ray muons, they can be used to probe very thick and dense objects. As charged particles, they can be tracked by ionization detectors, determining the position and direction of the muons. With detectors on either side of an object, particle direction changes can be used to extract scattering information within an object. This can be used to produce a scattering intensity image within the object related to density and atomic number. Such imaging is typically performed with a single detector-object orientation, taking advantage of the more intense downward flux of muons, producing planar imaging with some depth-of-field information in the third dimension. Several simulation studies have been published with multi-orientation tomography, which can form a three-dimensional representation faster than a single orientation view. In this work we present…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
