98%
921
2 minutes
20
The exact symbolic solution of the Bloch equations is given in the Lagrange form and illustrated with R2 experiments using a Hahn echo. Two different methods are also applied to approximately solve the Bloch equations, we find that splittings with effective-field interpretations are very substantially better than other approximations by comparing the errors. Estimates of transverse relaxation, R2, from Hahn echos are effected by frequency offset and field inhomogeneity. We use exact solutions of the Bloch equations and simulations to quantify both effects, and find that even in the presence of expected B0 inhomogeneity, off-resonance effects can be removed from R2 measurements, when∥ω∥⩽0.5γB1, by fitting the exact solutions of the Bloch equations. Further, the experiments and simulations show that the fitting models with the exact solutions of the Bloch equations do not depend on the sampling density and delay times.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2010.07.012 | DOI Listing |
Magn Reson Med
September 2025
Department of Mechanical Science and Bioengineering, The University of Osaka Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka, Japan.
Purpose: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) imaging are well-established approaches for evaluating cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow in subarachnoid and perivascular spaces, and have recently been applied to study ventricular CSF flow. However, DWI does not directly measure flow velocity, and the physical implications of DWI measurements are unclear. This study aimed to provide a theoretical interpretation of the DWI and IVIM imaging of CSF flow velocity fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMAGMA
September 2025
Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, School of Medicine and Health, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Purpose: To enable accelerated Bloch simulations by enhancing the open-source multi-purpose MRI simulation tool JEMRIS with graphic processing units (GPU) parallelization.
Methods: A GPU-compatible version of JEMRIS was built by shifting the computationally expensive parallelizable processes to the GPU to benefit from heterogeneous computing and by adding asynchronous communication and mixed precision support. With key classes reimplemented in CUDA C++, the developed GPU-JEMRIS framework was tested on simulations of common MRI artifacts in numerical phantoms.
Phys Rev Lett
August 2025
Politecnico di Milano, Department of Physics, Piazza Leonardo da Vinci 32, Milan 20133, Italy.
The reduced Coulomb screening in single-layer (1L) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) offers an ideal setting to explore excitonic many-body correlations. The interactions between excitons result in intra- and intervalley biexcitonic multiparticle states, whose contributions to the nonlinear optical response have remained elusive so far. Here, by using helicity-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy with sub-10 fs temporal resolution combined with a microscopic theory based on the excitonic Bloch equations we are able to unambiguously disentangle the contribution of two particle exciton and four particle biexciton correlations to the coherent optical response of 1L-WSe_{2} semiconductor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Med
August 2025
Millennium Institute for Intelligent Healthcare Engineering, Santiago, Chile.
Purpose: To propose a novel highly efficient isotropic-resolution 3D whole-heart saturation-recovery and variable-flip-angle (SAVA) T mapping sequence at 0.55 T, incorporating image navigator (iNAV)-based non-rigid motion correction and dictionary matching.
Methods: The proposed iNAV-based isotropic-resolution 3D whole-heart SAVA T mapping sequence at 0.
Chemphyschem
August 2025
Department of Chemistry & Center for Materials Research, Norfolk State University, 700 Park Avenue, Norfolk, Virginiya, 23504, USA.
The reaction of intermolecular proton exchange between the spin probe 3,6-di-tert-butyl-2-hydroxyphenoxyl and some dicarboxylic acids, such as oxalic, maleic, succinic, and adipic, is studied. The experimental spectra of the radical with acids are recorded using dynamic electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The studies are carried out at different temperatures in toluene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF