Abstract

In the 1990s, CEA has developed a very compact operational gamma camera, CARTOGAM, capable of mapping the surrounding radioactivity and representing it superimposed onto a visible-light image. Since then, the camera has been successfully industrialized and commercialized. In the same time, the Kurchatov Institute has developed a coded-aperture gamma camera. Both teams have joined their efforts to develop a compact coded-aperture gamma camera. This paper presents the first results obtained with a coded mask adapted to the existing CARTOGAM camera. Simulations have been carried out to design small-sized coded masks for high-energy gamma imaging (/sup 137/Cs or /sup 60/Co). Innovative tungsten-alloy masks have been achieved that lead to the following results: a significant increase in the sensitivity (up to 10 times), an improved angular resolution (2/spl deg/ to 3/spl deg/) and a large field of view (about 30/spl deg/). The laboratory results of /sup 137/Cs and /sup 60/Co imaging, including shadowgrams and reconstructed images for point sources, are presented.

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