I was thinking about how a modern CT scanner works, and simply can't work out how the data gets off the detector and to the rest of the system.
A contemporary scanner may have 60 kpixels on its sensor. Each pixel is digitized at full 24 bit depth, and the sensor operates at 3 kfps.
The problem is that the detector is mounted on a rotating gantry about 6 feet in diameter - which can spin at up to 180 rpm continuously (so no cables). The data needs to come off in real time - and must run along side power input to the gantry (3 ph, 400 V, 200 A).
So, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is how do you reliably transfer 5 Gbps over a rotating connection, along side a very heavy duty power supply?
The enabling tech is just referred to as 'slipring technology'. But as far as I can see, you need more than just common-or-garden sliprings to carry a 5 Gbps signal without trashing it.
A contemporary scanner may have 60 kpixels on its sensor. Each pixel is digitized at full 24 bit depth, and the sensor operates at 3 kfps.
The problem is that the detector is mounted on a rotating gantry about 6 feet in diameter - which can spin at up to 180 rpm continuously (so no cables). The data needs to come off in real time - and must run along side power input to the gantry (3 ph, 400 V, 200 A).
So, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is how do you reliably transfer 5 Gbps over a rotating connection, along side a very heavy duty power supply?
The enabling tech is just referred to as 'slipring technology'. But as far as I can see, you need more than just common-or-garden sliprings to carry a 5 Gbps signal without trashing it.