Spectroscopy Since 1975

Articles

The emerging use of magnetic resonance imaging to study river bed dynamics

Heather Haynes, Susithra Lakshmanan, Anne-Marie Ockelford, Elisa Vignaga, William M. Holmes

Fine sediments, often due to run-off from the land, can clog the surface and sub-surface spaces in gravel beds used by spawning fish to lay their eggs and by aquatic insects. Without an adequate flow of oxygenated water, the eggs and insects die. Heather Haynes, Susithra Lakshmanan, Anne-Marie Ockelford, Elisa Vignaga and William Holmes tells us about this in “The emerging use of magnetic resonance imaging to study river bed dynamics”. They have studied the infiltration of various sediments into model gravel beds both outside and flowing through a MRI instrument! They conclude that MRI “provides an exciting opportunity to unravel a plethora of processes relevant to wider environmental science”.

Article  |  Issue 27/5 (2015)

A short history of magnetic resonance imaging

Peter A. Rinck

A brief history and personal recollection of the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Article  |  Issue 20/1 (2008)