![]() Neutron detectors can see magnetic fields in 3-D, even in solids |
|
|
March 31, 2008
3-D images are not only useful in medicine; the observation of internal structures is also invaluable in many other fields of scientific investigation. Recently, researchers from the Hahn-Meitner-Institute (HMI) in Berlin in cooperation with University of Applied Sciences in Berlin have succeeded, for the first time, in a direct, 3-D visualization of magnetic fields inside solid, non-transparent materials. This is announced by Nikolay Kardjilov and colleagues in the current issue of the journal Nature Physics.
Kardjilov's group used this phenomenon as a measurement parameter for tomography experiments using two spin polarizers (which only allow the passage of neutrons whose spin points in a specific direction) to polarize and then analyze the neutrons. By detecting changes in the spins, it is possible to “see” the magnetic fields within the sample. Kardjilov explains this by comparison with a medical CT scan; when a specimen is irradiated with x-rays the density of the materials present alters the intensity of the light. "It's the same with our magnetic specimen, which changes the spin rotation of the neutrons," says Nikolay Kardjilov. "The equipment only allows passage of neutrons with a specific spin rotation, and this generates the contrast according to how the magnetic properties are distributed within the specimen. By rotating the specimen we can reconstruct a 3-D image." Since 2005, Nikolay Kardjilov has built up the neutron tomography section at HMI and now his group is the first to use spin rotation as a measurement signal 3-D imaging. Normally, neutron imaging relies on the different levels of absorption of radiation by different materials to produce contrast. The measurement of magnetic signals is a novel concept and its success lies partly in the polarizers and analyzers, and the detector system, which have been developed and built by the HMI researchers. Magnetism is one of the central research fields at HMI. To understand high temperature superconductivity, for example, it is vital to understand how magnetic flux lines are distributed and how these flux lines can be established in the material. With Kardjilov's experimental setup, it is now possible, among other things, to visualize magnetic domains in magnetic crystals three-dimensionally. More information about Hahn-Meitner-Institut’s neutron tomography facility is available here: http://www.hmi.de/bereiche/SF/SF3/methods/ntomo/index_en.html Hahn-Meitner-Institut Berlin: http://www.hmi.de/index_en.html SOURCE: Hahn-Meitner-Institut Berlin |
|
|
Use of this website is subject to its terms of use. Privacy Policy |