anor277 said:
I believe the MRI machine in medical use responds to the nuclei in hydrogen (one of the most MRI receptive nuclei and of course a major component of biological entities) to give a powerful diagnostic tool.
Yes. The key to MRI is that there are billions of atoms of hydrogen in a small packed volume in our bodies. Thats absolutely key, because as you suggested, the magnetic flux generated by hydrogen protons is very small, so you need trillions of them concentrated in a small space to get good signal.
The nucleus in a proton can be either spin aligned (alpha – lower energy state) or spin unaligned (beta) with respect to the permanent magnetic field supplied by the electromagnetic in the MRI machine.
Yes, interestingly a typical field strength of 1.5T is only sufficient to tip a tiny minority of the total spins in the direction of the aligned field. Its on the order of one excess spin per million. This is somewhat unfortunate, because you could get much better signal if ALL the spins lined up parallel to the field. Higher field strengths give better images because a higher field causes more of the spins to line up parallel to the field. However, there are engineering design problems to building high field strength magnets that are also suitable for human imaging purposes.
A lot of people are claustrophobic, so they cant be scanned in a regular closed bore system. We have open MRIs that use 2 panels instead of a bore system, but the field strength for those is much less than conventional MRI (0.5T - 1.0T max). As a result, the images from the open MRI systems are not as good as the closed bore systems.
Flipping the protons from one state to the other is a process requiring very little energy yet the instruments are sensitive enough to measure the transitions.
Yeah as I said the key is that although the magnetic flux measurable from one proton is very small, there are trillions and trillions of hydrogen protons in a small volume size, so when you add up a small signal from such a large number of protons, the resulting flux is measurable by the coils in the MR scanner.
It is beyond me how the spectra of a human body supplied by an MRI machine can give interpretable results but they demonstrably can.
MRI is basically an NMR system with 3 magnetic gradient fields. With magnetic gradient fields, you can spatially encode the magnetic spin flux generated by the sample. NMR systems use RF pulses to generate signal from the sample, but it doesnt have any gradient fields to parse out WHERE in the sample those spin flux contributions are coming from, so the overall result for NMR is a spin reading of the whole sample.
With 3 gradient fields as is typical for an MRI system, you can control which part of the sample gets excited (slice select) and then use the 2 other gradients to get an x,y encoded matrix of magnetic flux. Its very cool stuff. The guys who won last year's Nobel Prize for Medicine were the engineers/physicists who discovered the use of gradients to turn NMR systems into a true imaging system.