Lisa! said:
What is the source of noises we hear during MRI imaging?
Thanks!
To the other respondents: if you have no clue, please don't offer your incorrect guesses. Lok, your response is ludicrous. f95toli, systems with cryocoolers do often have background noise when you walk into imaging suite, but it is generally inaudible inside the bore and in any case is unrelated to the
intense noise that every MRI patient is familiar with. To answer your question, Lisa, you need a little background on how the instrument works:
MRI systems require a very strong magnetic field to align the magnetic moments ("spins") of the hydrogen nuclei in your body. In a typical system this field is produced by a superconducting solenoid (you slide into the cylindrical cavity at the center of the magnet). The frequency of magnetic resonance is directly proportional to the field strength. Big GE systems, for instance, use a 1.5T field and excite/detect spins at 64 MHz.
To image, the locations of spins in the body must be differentiated. This is done by adding weaker position-dependent magnetic fields on top of the static strong one, so a nucleus's magnetic resonance frequency depends on where it is. Field gradients are applied in three orthogonal directions (x, y and z) in a certain time sequence, and, to create an image rapidly, they are switched on and off over and over very quickly. This is how the intensity in each pixel of the image is built up.
Ok, now to the noise. The gradients are produced by big electrical coils that also sit in the main bore. When current (typically around 150A) flows, the wires feel a large sideways Lorentz force because they are in a strong static field. Consequently, these coils are wound on strong formers and are potted to minimize wire movement. Because the current is turned on and off very rapidly, however, the wires exert a strong impulsive force that is heard as a bang even though gross wire motion is controlled. The repetitive banging you hear is the three coils being pulsed over and over with various strengths, timings and sequences to build up the image.
Here is a two-page summary of MRI. The second page shows a sketch of the main magnet and the gradient coils.
http://people.ee.duke.edu/~jshorey/MRIHomepage/work.html"
Here's a much more detailed tutorial if you want to learn more about spins, nuclear magnetic resonance, and how it is used to produce images:
http://orthopedics.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=orthopedics&cdn=health&tm=12&f=10&su=p284.9.336.ip_p736.3.336.ip_&tt=2&bt=1&bts=1&zu=http%3A//electronics.howstuffworks.com/mri.htm"