[Gate-users] Fwd: Question on GATE source geometry

David Sarrut David.Sarrut at creatis.insa-lyon.fr
Wed Jul 3 08:20:59 CEST 2019


(I forward this because it can be of interest for others users)

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: David Sarrut <David.Sarrut at creatis.insa-lyon.fr>
Date: Wed, Jul 3, 2019 at 8:20 AM
Subject: Re: Question on GATE source geometry
To: Matthew Strugari <matthew.strugari at dal.ca>

Hi Matthew,

there are two ways to define source shapes : 1) GPS, 2) voxelized source.
Both work but have some interests and some flaws.

1) GPS (
https://opengate.readthedocs.io/en/latest/source_and_particle_management.html?highlight=gps
)
Only few simple shapes may be defined: Sphere, Ellipsoid, Cylinder, or
Para. Warning: the doc is particularly misleading here (code have changed a
lot in the past while changes were not all reflected in the docs). Best is
to check with
https://github.com/OpenGATE/Gate/blob/develop/source/physics/src/GateSingleParticleSourceMessenger.cc

2) for more complex shapes, use voxelized source (
https://opengate.readthedocs.io/en/latest/voxelized_source_and_phantom.html#voxelized-sources
)
You create an image, with pixel values representing the intensity. I
recommend to ensure that the sum of pixel values is equal to 1
(normalization), such as is it then easy to specify the total activity.
This vox source is a "virtual" volume you can superposed it with any other
real shape in the simulation. Example : TRT in
https://davidsarrut.pages.in2p3.fr/gate-exercices-site/docs/exercice5/ with
the macros
https://gitlab.in2p3.fr/davidsarrut/gate-exercices/tree/master/internal-rt/mac
(see
source-gps and source-vox).

If needed, you can always use several sources in the same simulation.

We plan to rewrite all documentation in the following months ...

have fun !
David


On Tue, Jul 2, 2019 at 10:15 PM Matthew Strugari <matthew.strugari at dal.ca>
wrote:

> Hi David,
>
> Thank you for the information at the GATE workshop in Montreal, I found it
> to be very useful!
>
> I have a question regarding complex shapes when defining the shape of the
> source in GATE. I have modelled an Eppendorf tube to contain 4 ul of saline
> as defined by a semi-sphere attached to a truncated cone. Ideally, I would
> like to specify this volume to contain Tc-99m as the source. Unfortunately,
> it appears that I do not have access to these same shapes when defining the
> source. Is it possible to define an object geometry as the source? Or is
> there someway that I could define the source to occupy the exact same
> volume as the geometry in which it is contained? I can't seem to figure out
> a trick to define a semi-sphere and truncated cone as the source.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Matthew
>
>
> --
>
> Matthew Strugari
> Biomedical Translational Imaging Centre - BIOTIC,
> 5890 University Ave,
> Halifax, NS, B3K 6R8
>
>

-- 
David Sarrut, Phd
Directeur de recherche CNRS
CREATIS, UMR CNRS 5220, Inserm U1206
Centre de lutte contre le cancer Léon Bérard
28 rue Laënnec, 69373 Lyon cedex 08
Tel : 04 78 78 51 51 / 06 74 72 05 42
http://www.creatis.insa-lyon.fr/~dsarrut
_________________________________
 "2 + 2 = 5,  for extremely large values of 2"
_________________________________


-- 
David Sarrut, Phd
Directeur de recherche CNRS
CREATIS, UMR CNRS 5220, Inserm U1206
Centre de lutte contre le cancer Léon Bérard
28 rue Laënnec, 69373 Lyon cedex 08
Tel : 04 78 78 51 51 / 06 74 72 05 42
http://www.creatis.insa-lyon.fr/~dsarrut
_________________________________
 "2 + 2 = 5,  for extremely large values of 2"
_________________________________
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.opengatecollaboration.org/pipermail/gate-users/attachments/20190703/f4e71bab/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Gate-users mailing list