Image Reconstruction in Thermoacoustic Tomography
Thermoacoustic tomography (TAT) is an emerging modality of medical imaging which produces high resolution, high contrast tomographic images without exposing patients to dangerous ionizing radiation. In a TAT scan, pulsed radio frequency energy applied to a tissue sample causes rapid thermoelastic expansion and contraction, propagating a pressure wave through the sample. Transducers arranged around the patient's body record this ultrasonic pressure data and there are several reconstruction regimes available to recover a tomographic image from this information. In this talk, I will describe the standard wave equation model for thermoacoustic signal generation and highlight several of the image reconstruction techniques discovered in the past twenty years. I will then present a new Neumann series exact solution due to P. Stefanov and G. Uhlmann. This very elegant method motivates and theoretically justifies wave equation time reversal methods for TAT reconstruction and I will outline some promising numerical algorithms of this type.