Questions and Answers ​in MRI
  • Home
  • Complete List of Questions
  • …Magnets & Scanners
    • Basic Electromagnetism >
      • What causes magnetism?
      • What is a Tesla?
      • Who was Tesla?
      • What is a Gauss?
      • How strong is 3.0T?
      • What is a gradient?
      • Aren't gradients coils?
      • What is susceptibility?
      • How to levitate a frog?
      • What is ferromagnetism?
      • Superparamagnetism?
    • Magnets - Part I >
      • Types of magnets?
      • Brands of scanners?
      • Which way does field point?
      • Which is the north pole?
      • Low v mid v high field?
      • Advantages to low-field?
      • Disadvantages?
      • What is homogeneity?
      • Why homogeneity?
      • Why shimming?
      • Passive shimming?
      • Active shimming?
    • Magnets - Part II >
      • Superconductivity?
      • Perpetual motion?
      • How to ramp?
      • Superconductive design?
      • Room Temp supercon?
      • Liquid helium use?
      • What is a quench?
      • Is field ever turned off?
      • Emergency stop button?
    • Gradients >
      • Gradient coils?
      • How do z-gradients work?
      • X- and Y- gradients?
      • Open scanner gradients?
      • Eddy current problems?
      • Active shielded gradients?
      • Active shield confusion?
      • What is pre-emphasis?
      • Gradient heating?
      • Gradient specifications?
      • Gradient linearity?
    • RF & Coils >
      • Many kinds of coils?
      • Radiofrequency waves?
      • Phase v frequency?
      • RF Coil function(s)?
      • RF-transmit coils?
      • LP vs CP (Quadrature)?
      • Multi-transmit RF?
      • Receive-only coils?
      • Array coils?
      • AIR Coils?
    • Site Planning >
      • MR system layout?
      • What are fringe fields?
      • How to reduce fringe?
      • Magnetic shielding?
      • Need for vibration testing?
      • What's that noise?
      • Why RF Shielding?
      • Wires/tubes thru wall?
  • ...Safety and Screening
    • Overview >
      • ACR Safety Zones?
      • MR safety screening?
      • Incomplete screening?
      • Passive v active implants?
      • Conditional implants?
      • Common safety issues?
      • Projectiles?
      • Metal detectors?
      • Pregnant patients?
      • Postop, ER & ICU patients?
      • Temperature monitoring?
      • Orbital foreign bodies?
      • Bullets and shrapnel?
    • Static Fields >
      • "Dangerous" metals?
      • "Safe" metals?
      • Magnetizing metal?
      • Object shape?
      • Forces on metal?
      • Most dangerous place?
      • Force/torque testing?
      • Static field bioeffects?
      • Dizziness/Vertigo?
      • Flickering lights?
      • Metallic taste?
    • RF Fields >
      • RF safety overview?
      • RF biological effects?
      • What is SAR?
      • SAR limits?
      • Operating modes?
      • How to reduce SAR?
      • RF burns?
      • Estimate implant heating?
      • SED vs SAR?
      • B1+rms vs SAR?
      • Personnel exposure?
      • Cell phones?
    • Gradient Fields >
      • Gradient safety overview
      • Acoustic noise?
      • Nerve stimulation?
      • Gradient vs RF heating?
    • Safety: Neurological >
      • Aneurysm coils/clips?
      • Shunts/drains?
      • Pressure monitors/bolts?
      • Deep brain stimulators?
      • Spinal cord stimulators?
      • Vagal nerve stimulators?
      • Cranial electrodes?
      • Carotid clamps?
      • Peripheral stimulators?
      • Epidural catheters?
    • Safety: Head & Neck >
      • Additional orbit safety?
      • Cochlear Implants?
      • Bone conduction implants?
      • Other ear implants?
      • Dental/facial implants?
      • ET tubes & airways?
    • Safety: Chest & Vascular >
      • Breast tissue expanders?
      • Breast biopsy markers?
      • Airway stents/valves/coils?
      • Respiratory stimulators?
      • Ports/vascular access?
      • Swan-Ganz catheters?
      • IVC filters?
      • Implanted infusion pumps?
      • Insulin pumps & CGMs?
      • Vascular stents/grafts?
      • Sternal wires/implants?
    • Safety: Cardiac >
      • Pacemaker dangers?
      • Pacemaker terminology?
      • New/'Safe" Pacemakers?
      • Old/Legacy Pacemakers?
      • Violating the conditions?
      • Epicardial pacers/leads?
      • Cardiac monitors?
      • Heart valves?
      • Miscellaneous CV devices?
    • Safety: Abdominal >
      • PIllCam and capsules?
      • Gastric pacemakers?
      • Other GI devices?
      • Contraceptive devices?
      • Foley catheters?
      • Incontinence devices?
      • Penile Implants?
      • Sacral nerve stimulators?
      • GU stents and other?
    • Safety: Orthopedic >
      • Orthopedic hardware?
      • External fixators?
      • Traction and halos?
      • Bone stimulators?
      • Magnetic rods?
  • …The NMR Phenomenon
    • Spin >
      • What is spin?
      • Why I = ½, 1, etc?
      • Proton = nucleus = spin?
      • Predict nuclear spin (I)?
      • Magnetic dipole moment?
      • Gyromagnetic ratio (γ)?
      • "Spin" vs "Spin state"?
      • Energy splitting?
      • Fall to lowest state?
      • Quantum "reality"?
    • Precession >
      • Why precession?
      • Who was Larmor?
      • Energy for precession?
      • Chemical shift?
      • Net magnetization (M)?
      • Does M instantly appear?
      • Does M also precess?
      • Does precession = NMR?
    • Resonance >
      • MR vs MRI vs NMR?
      • Who discovered NMR?
      • How does B1 tip M?
      • Why at Larmor frequency?
      • What is flip angle?
      • Spins precess after 180°?
      • Phase coherence?
      • Release of RF energy?
      • Rotating frame?
      • Off-resonance?
      • Adiabatic excitation?
      • Adiabatic pulses?
    • Relaxation - Physics >
      • Bloch equations?
      • What is T1?
      • What is T2?
      • Relaxation rate vs time?
      • Why is T1 > T2?
      • T2 vs T2*?
      • Causes of Relaxation?
      • Dipole-dipole interactions?
      • Chemical Exchange?
      • Spin-Spin interactions?
      • Macromolecule effects?
      • Which H's produce signal?
      • "Invisible" protons?
      • Magnetization Transfer?
      • Bo effect on T1 & T2?
      • How to predict T1 & T2?
    • Relaxation - Clincial >
      • T1 bright? - fat
      • T1 bright? - other oils
      • T1 bright? - cholesterol
      • T1 bright? - calcifications
      • T1 bright? - meconium
      • T1 bright? - melanin
      • T1 bright? - protein/mucin
      • T1 bright? - myelin
      • Magic angle?
      • MT Imaging/Contrast?
  • …Pulse Sequences
    • MR Signals >
      • Origin of MR signal?
      • Free Induction Decay?
      • Gradient echo?
      • TR and TE?
      • Spin echo?
      • 90°-90° Hahn Echo?
      • Stimulated echoes?
      • STEs for imaging?
      • 4 or more RF-pulses?
      • Partial flip angles?
      • How is signal higher?
      • Optimal flip angle?
    • Spin Echo >
      • SE vs Multi-SE vs FSE?
      • Image contrast: TR/TE?
      • Opposite effects ↑T1 ↑T2?
      • Meaning of weighting?
      • Does SE correct for T2?
      • Effect of 180° on Mz?
      • Direction of 180° pulse?
    • Inversion Recovery >
      • What is IR?
      • Why use IR?
      • Phase-sensitive IR?
      • Why not PSIR always?
      • Choice of IR parameters?
      • TI to null a tissue?
      • STIR?
      • T1-FLAIR
      • T2-FLAIR?
      • IR-prepped sequences?
      • Double IR?
    • Gradient Echo >
      • GRE vs SE?
      • Multi-echo GRE?
      • Types of GRE sequences?
      • Commercial Acronyms?
      • Spoiling - what and how?
      • Spoiled-GRE parameters?
      • Spoiled for T1W only?
      • What is SSFP?
      • GRASS/FISP: how?
      • GRASS/FISP: parameters?
      • GRASS vs MPGR?
      • PSIF vs FISP?
      • True FISP/FIESTA?
      • FIESTA v FIESTA-C?
      • DESS?
      • MERGE/MEDIC?
      • GRASE?
      • MP-RAGE v MR2RAGE?
    • Susceptibility Imaging >
      • What is susceptibility (χ)?
      • What's wrong with GRE?
      • Making an SW image?
      • Phase of blood v Ca++?
      • Quantitative susceptibility?
    • Diffusion: Basic >
      • What is diffusion?
      • Iso-/Anisotropic diffusion?
      • "Apparent" diffusion?
      • Making a DW image?
      • What is the b-value?
      • b0 vs b50?
      • Trace vs ADC map?
      • Light/dark reversal?
      • T2 "shine through"?
      • Exponential ADC?
      • T2 "black-out"?
      • DWI bright causes?
    • Diffusion: Advanced >
      • Diffusion Tensor?
      • DTI (tensor imaging)?
      • Whole body DWI?
      • Readout-segmented DWI?
      • Small FOV DWI?
      • IVIM?
      • Diffusion Kurtosis?
    • Fat-Water Imaging >
      • Fat & Water properties?
      • F-W chemical shift?
      • In-phase/out-of-phase?
      • Best method?
      • Dixon method?
      • "Fat-sat" pulses?
      • Water excitation?
      • STIR?
      • SPIR?
      • SPAIR v SPIR?
      • SPIR/SPAIR v STIR?
  • …Making an Image
    • From Signals to Images >
      • Phase v frequency?
      • Angular frequency (ω)?
      • Signal squiggles?
      • Real v Imaginary?
      • Fourier Transform (FT)?
      • What are 2D- & 3D-FTs?
      • Who invented MRI?
      • How to locate signals?
    • Frequency Encoding >
      • Frequency encoding?
      • Receiver bandwidth?
      • Narrow bandwidth?
      • Slice-selective excitation?
      • SS gradient lobes?
      • Cross-talk?
      • Frequency encode all?
      • Mixing of slices?
      • Two slices at once?
      • Simultaneous Multi-Slice?
    • Phase Encoding >
      • Phase-encoding gradient?
      • Single PE step?
      • What is phase-encoding?
      • PE and FE together?
      • 2DFT reconstruction?
      • Choosing PE/FE direction?
    • Performing an MR Scan >
      • What are the steps?
      • Automatic prescan?
      • Routine shimming?
      • Coil tuning/matching?
      • Center frequency?
      • Transmitter gain?
      • Receiver gain?
      • Dummy cycles?
      • Where's my data?
      • MR Tech qualifications?
    • Image Quality Control >
      • Who regulates MRI?
      • Who accredits?
      • Mandatory accreditation?
      • Routine quality control?
      • MR phantoms?
      • Geometric accuracy?
      • Image uniformity?
      • Slice parameters?
      • Image resolution?
      • Signal-to-noise?
      • Ghosting?
  • …K-space & Rapid Imaging
    • K-space (Basic) >
      • What is k-space?
      • Parts of k-space?
      • What does "k" stand for?
      • Spatial frequencies?
      • Locations in k-space?
      • Data for k-space?
      • Why signal ↔ k-space?
      • Spin-warp imaging?
      • Big spot in middle?
      • K-space trajectories?
      • Radial sampling?
    • K-space (Advanced) >
      • K-space grid?
      • Negative frequencies?
      • Field-of-view (FOV)
      • Rectangular FOV?
      • Partial Fourier?
      • Phase symmetry?
      • Read symmetry?
      • Why not use both?
      • ZIP?
    • Rapid Imaging (FSE &EPI) >
      • What is FSE/TSE?
      • FSE parameters?
      • Bright Fat?
      • Other FSE differences?
      • Dual-echo FSE?
      • Driven equilibrium?
      • Reduced flip angle FSE?
      • Hyperechoes?
      • SPACE/CUBE/VISTA?
      • Echo-planar imaging?
      • HASTE/SS-FSE?
    • Parallel Imaging (PI) >
      • What is PI?
      • How is PI different?
      • PI coils and sequences?
      • Why and when to use?
      • Two types of PI?
      • SENSE/ASSET?
      • GRAPPA/ARC?
      • CAIPIRINHA?
      • Compressed sensing?
      • Noise in PI?
      • Artifacts in PI?
  • …Contrast Agents
    • Contrast Agents: Physics >
      • Why Gadolinium?
      • Paramagnetic relaxation?
      • What is relaxivity?
      • Why does Gd shorten T1?
      • Does Gd affect T2?
      • Gd & field strength?
      • Best T1-pulse sequence?
      • Triple dose and MT?
      • Dynamic CE imaging?
      • Gadolinium on CT?
    • Contrast Agents: Clinical >
      • So many Gd agents!
      • Important properties?
      • Ionic v non-ionic?
      • Intra-articular/thecal Gd?
      • Gd liver agents (Eovist)?
      • Mn agents (Teslascan)?
      • Feridex & Liver Agents?
      • Lymph node agents?
      • Ferumoxytol?
      • Blood pool (Ablavar)?
      • Bowel contrast agents?
    • Contrast Agents: Safety >
      • Gadolinium safety?
      • Allergic reactions?
      • Renal toxicity?
      • What is NSF?
      • NSF by agent?
      • Informed consent for Gd?
      • Gd protocol?
      • Is Gd safe in infants?
      • Reduced dose in infants?
      • Gd in breast milk?
      • Gd in pregnancy?
      • Gd accumulation?
      • Gd deposition disease?
  • …Cardiovascular and MRA
    • Flow effects in MRI >
      • Defining flow?
      • Expected velocities?
      • Laminar v turbulent?
      • Predicting MR of flow?
      • Time-of-flight effects?
      • Spin phase effects?
      • Flow void?
      • Why GRE ↑ flow signal?
      • Slow flow v thrombus?
      • Even-echo rephasing?
      • Flow-compensation?
      • Flow misregistration?
    • MR Angiography - I >
      • MRA methods?
      • Dark vs bright blood?
      • Time-of-Flight (TOF) MRA?
      • 2D vs 3D MRA?
      • MRA parameters?
      • Magnetization Transfer?
      • Ramped flip angle?
      • MOTSA?
      • Fat-suppressed MRA?
      • TOF MRA Artifacts?
      • Phase-contrast MRA?
      • What is VENC?
      • Measuring flow?
      • 4D Flow Imaging?
      • How accurate?
    • MR Angiography - II >
      • Gated 3D FSE MRA?
      • 3D FSE MRA parameters?
      • SSFP MRA?
      • Inflow-enhanced SSFP?
      • MRA with ASL?
      • Other MRA methods?
      • Contrast-enhanced MRA?
      • Timing the bolus?
      • View ordering in MRA?
      • Bolus chasing?
      • TRICKS or TWIST?
      • CE-MRA artifacts?
    • Cardiac I - Intro/Anatomy >
      • Cardiac protocols?
      • Patient prep?
      • EKG problems?
      • Magnet changes EKG?
      • Gating v triggering?
      • Gating parameters?
      • Heart navigators?
      • Dark blood/Double IR?
      • Why not single IR?
      • Triple IR?
      • Polar plots?
      • Coronary artery MRA?
    • Cardiac II - Function >
      • Beating heart movies?
      • Cine parameters?
      • Real-time cine?
      • Ventricular function?
      • Tagging/SPAMM?
      • Perfusion: why and how?
      • 1st pass perfusion?
      • Quantifying perfusion?
      • Dark rim artifact
    • Cardiac III - Viability >
      • Gd enhancement?
      • TI to null myocardium?
      • PS (phase-sensitive) IR?
      • Wideband LGE?
      • T1 mapping?
      • Iron/T2*-mapping?
      • Edema/T2-mapping?
      • Why/how stress test?
      • Stess drugs/agents?
      • Stress consent form?
  • …MR Artifacts
    • Tissue-related artifacts >
      • Chemical shift artifact?
      • Chemical shift in phase?
      • Reducing chemical shift?
      • Chemical Shift 2nd Kind?
      • In-phase/out-of phase?
      • IR bounce point?
      • Susceptibility artifact?
      • Metal suppression?
      • Dielectric effect?
      • Dielectric Pads?
    • Motion-related artifacts >
      • Why discrete ghosts?
      • Motion artifact direction?
      • Reducing motion artifacts?
      • Saturation pulses?
      • Gating methods?
      • Respiratory comp?
      • Navigator echoes?
      • PROPELLER/BLADE?
    • Technique-related artifacts >
      • Partial volume effects?
      • Slice overlap?
      • Aliasing?
      • Wrap-around artifact?
      • Eliminate wrap-around?
      • Phase oversampling?
      • Frequency wrap-around?
      • Spiral/radial artifacts?
      • Gibbs artifact?
      • Nyquist (N/2) ghosts?
      • Zipper artifact?
      • Data artifacts?
      • Surface coil flare?
      • MRA Artifacts (TOF)?
      • MRA artifacts (CE)?
  • …Functional Imaging
    • Perfusion I: Intro & DSC >
      • Measuring perfusion?
      • Meaning of CBF, MTT etc?
      • DSC v DCE v ASL?
      • How to perform DSC?
      • Bolus Gd effect?
      • T1 effects on DSC?
      • DSC recirculation?
      • DSC curve analysis?
      • DSC signal v [Gd]
      • Arterial input (AIF)?
      • Quantitative DSC?
    • Perfusion II: DCE >
      • What is DCE?
      • How is DCE performed?
      • How is DCE analyzed?
      • Breast DCE?
      • DCE signal v [Gd]
      • DCE tissue parmeters?
      • Parameters to images?
      • K-trans = permeability?
      • Utility of DCE?
    • Perfusion III: ASL >
      • What is ASL?
      • ASL methods overview?
      • CASL?
      • PASL?
      • pCASL?
      • ASL parameters?
      • ASL artifacts?
      • Gadolinium and ASL?
      • Vascular color maps?
      • Quantifying flow?
    • Functional MRI/BOLD - I >
      • Who invented fMRI?
      • How does fMRI work?
      • BOLD contrast?
      • Why does BOLD ↑ signal?
      • Does BOLD=brain activity?
      • BOLD pulse sequences?
      • fMRI Paradigm design?
      • Why "on-off" comparison?
      • Motor paradigms?
      • Visual?
      • Language?
    • Functional MRI/BOLD - II >
      • Process/analyze fMRI?
      • Best fMRI software?
      • Data pre-processing?
      • Registration/normalization?
      • fMRI statistical analysis?
      • General Linear Model?
      • Activation "blobs"?
      • False activation?
      • Resting state fMRI?
      • Analyze RS-fMRI?
      • Network/Graphs?
      • fMRI at 7T?
      • Mind reading/Lie detector?
      • fMRI critique?
  • …MR Spectroscopy
    • MRS I - Basics >
      • MRI vs MRS?
      • Spectra vs images?
      • Chemical shift (δ)?
      • Measuring δ?
      • Backward δ scale?
      • Predicting δ?
      • Size/shapes of peaks?
      • Splitting of peaks?
      • Localization methods?
      • Single v multi-voxel?
      • PRESS?
      • STEAM?
      • ISIS?
      • CSI?
    • MRS II - Clinical ¹H MRS >
      • How-to: brain MRS?
      • Water suppression?
      • Fat suppression?
      • Normal brain spectra?
      • Choice of TR/TE/etc?
      • Hunter's angle?
      • Lactate inversion?
      • Metabolite mapping?
      • Metabolite quantitation?
      • Breast MRS?
      • Gd effect on MRS?
      • How-to: prostate MRS?
      • Prostate spectra?
      • Muscle ¹H-MRS?
      • Liver ¹H-MRS?
      • MRS artifacts?
    • MRS III - Multi-nuclear >
      • Other nuclei?
      • Why phosphorus?
      • How-to: ³¹P MRS
      • Normal ³¹P spectra?
      • Organ differences?
      • ³¹P measurements?
      • Decoupling?
      • NOE?
      • Carbon MRS?
      • Sodium imaging?
      • Xenon imaging?
  • ...Artificial Intelligence
    • AI Part I: Basics >
      • Artificial Intelligence (AI)?
      • What is a neural network?
      • Machine Learning (ML)?
      • Shallow v Deep ML?
      • Shallow networks?
      • Deep network types?
      • Data prep and fitting?
      • Back-Propagation?
      • DL 'Playground'?
    • AI Part 2: Advanced >
      • What is convolution?
      • Convolutional Network?
      • Softmax?
      • Upsampling?
      • Limitations/Problems of AI?
      • Is the Singularity near?
    • AI Part 3: Image processing >
      • AI in clinical MRI?
      • Super-resolution?
  • ...Tissue Properties Imaging
    • MRI of Hemorrhage >
      • Hematoma overview?
      • Types of Hemoglobin?
      • Hyperacute/Oxy-Hb?
      • Acute/Deoxy-Hb?
      • Subacute/Met-Hb?
      • Deoxy-Hb v Met-Hb?
      • Extracellular met-Hb?
      • Chronic hematomas?
      • Hemichromes?
      • Ferritin/Hemosiderin?
      • Subarachnoid blood?
      • Blood at lower fields?
    • T2 cartilage mapping
    • MR Elastography?
    • Synthetic MRI?
    • Amide Proton Transfer?
    • MR thermography?
    • Electric Properties Imaging?
  • Copyright/Legal
    • Copyright Issues
    • Legal Disclaimers
  • Forums/Blogs/Links
  • What's New
  • Self-test Quizzes - NEW!
    • Magnets & Scanners Quiz
    • Safety & Screening Quiz
    • NMR Phenomenon Quiz
    • Pulse Sequences Quiz
    • Making an Image Quiz
    • K-space & Rapid Quiz
    • Contrast & Blood Quiz
    • Cardiovascular & MRA Quiz

The Discovery of NMR

Who discovered NMR?  
NMR, Rabi, Purcell, Bloch

Isidor Rabi

Isidor Rabi
Isidor Rabi (1898-1988)
Credit for the discovery of NMR goes to Isidor Isaac Rabi, who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1944. Working at New York City’s Columbia University in the 1930’s, Rabi and his team were attempting to measure the magnetic properties of various nuclei including hydrogen, deuterium, and lithium.  Using a modification of Otto Stern's apparatus, Rabi described how nuclei could be induced to flip their principal magnetic orientation by an oscillating magnetic field.  This idea was originally proposed by Dutch physicist Cornelius J. Gorter in 1936 (one year before Rabi's successful demonstration), but Gorter was unable to validate this phenomenon due to limitations of his experimental setup. Gorter is sometimes known as "the man who almost discovered NMR."

Rabi’s method involved using an electromagnet of approximately 0.2T and a hairpin coil producing an oscillatory RF-field of about 3.5 MHz.  The RF-field was maintained at constant frequency and the main magnetic field was varied by changing its current. Rabi then passed a "molecular beam" of lithium chloride (LiCl) molecules through a vacuum chamber and subsequently into the magnetic apparatus. In 1938 he and his team reported energy absorption/resonance peaks for both Li and Cl as predicted.  Rabi named this phenomenon "nuclear magnetic resonance." 
Rabi NMR
Resonance of LiCl from Rabi's 1938 paper.
In honor of Dr. Rabi's achievements, The International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) presents the I.I. Rabi Award each year to a young investigator for contributions to the basic science aspects of NMR. 

Felix Bloch and Edward Purcell

Bloch and Purcell
Felix Bloch (1905-1983) & Edward Purcell (1912-1997)
Although Isidor Rabi is generally credited for the discovery of NMR, he did so in an inherently "unnatural" context — using a molecular beam in a vacuum where where individual nuclei were isolated from each another and their environment. It would not be until late 1945 that independent teams led by Felix Bloch at Stanford and Edward Mills Purcell at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, would simultaneously demonstrate NMR in condensed matter (water and paraffin, respectively). Reports of their discoveries were simultaneously published as short "Letters to the Editor" in the January, 1946 issue of Physical Review. In recognition for this and their subsequent work, Bloch and Purcell jointly received the the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1952.

In the late 1930's Edward Purcell was just beginning his career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and had only written a handful of papers prior to interruption of his research by World War II. Back at work in the winter of 1945, he, Henry Torrey, and Robert Pound filled an electromagnetic cavity with 850 cc of solid paraffin and placed the device in an electromagnet at Harvard's Research Laboratory of Physics. Driving the cavity with an oscillating current of about 30 MHz, the magnetic field strength was slowly increased until at about 0.7T when a sudden, 20-fold sharp increase in the cavity's absorption of radiation occurred, verifying the predicted nuclear magnetic resonance of hydrogen nuclei at that field strength and frequency. 
Purcell NMR
Diagram of resonant cavity used in Purcell's 1945 experiment for detecting resonant absorption of hydrogen nuclei in paraffin. Hairpin RF loops are shown; the main magnetic field is not pictured.
About 1 month later at Stanford, Felix Bloch, William Hansen, and Martin Packard demonstrated NMR in a different substance and using a much smaller apparatus. They placed about 1 cc of water in a small glass bulb, around which were wrapped separate transmitter and receiver coils optimized for radiofrequencies in the range of 8 MHz. The receiver coils were placed perpendicular to the transmitter coils so that the input waves would not be detected.  The RF-specimen device was then placed between the poles of an adjustable electromagnet operating at approximately 0.18T. Like Purcell's group, Bloch's team slowly changed the magnetic field until resonance was achieved. Rather than measuring absorption, however, Bloch et al. detected a nuclear induction signal in the receiver coil as a manifestation of the NMR phenomenon. 
Bloch NMR
Page from Bloch's notebook showing the theory behind his famous experiment. Note coffee stains.
Bloch NMR
Bloch's apparatus. The water sample (hatched circle) is surrounded by transmitter and receiver loops. The main magnetic field (perpendicular to the plane) is not shown.
I have always found it interesting that the two completely different experimental approaches used by Purcell and Bloch mirror the two different ways of describing the NMR phenomenon itself. Purcell's method, measuring energy absorption, is inherently quantum mechanical.  Bloch's approach, recording a current induced in a nearby coil from rotation of a magnetization vector, is distinctly classical in nature. We continue to feel this dichotomy between the quantum and classical approaches even today.

I strongly encourage everyone involved in the practice of NMR or MRI to take a few minutes to read some of the historical papers cited below.  They are all very readable, even for those with little background in the field, and give insight into how such great advances took place.

Advanced Discussion (show/hide)»

No supplementary material yet. Check back soon!

References
    Bloch F, Hansen WW, Packard M. Nuclear Induction. Phys Rev 1946; 69:127 (The original announcement by Bloch's group) 
    Bloch F, Hansen WW, Packard M. The nuclear induction experiment. Phys Rev 1946;70:474-485. (A detailed account of their apparatus and experiment).
    Bloch F. The principle of nuclear induction. Nobel Lecture 1952, pp. 203-215 (from nobelprize.org)
     Gorter CJ, Broer LJF. Negative result of an attempt to observe nuclear magnetic resonance in solids. Physica 1942; 9:591. (First published paper to use the term "nuclear magnetic resonance" in its title, attributed to Rabi).
     Hahn EL. Felix Bloch and magnetic resonance. Bull Mag Reson 1985; 7: 82-89.
(Good history of Bloch's contributions with many pages from his original notebooks). 
     Purcell EM, Torrey HC, Pound RV. Resonance absorption by nuclear moments in a solid. Phys Rev 1946; 69:37-38. (The original announcement by Purcell's group)     
     Purcell EM. Research in nuclear magnetism. Nobel Lecture 1952, pp 219-231 from nobelprize.org
     Rabi II. Space quantization in a gyrating magnetic field. Phys Rev 1937; 51:652-4. (the mathematical theory underlying NMR detection in the molecular beam apparatus).
     Rabi II, Zacharias JR, Millman S, Kusch P.  A new method of measuring nuclear magnetic moment. Phys Rev 1938;53:318. (The first demonstration of resonance absorption in LiCl, whose graph is shown above.)    
     Ramsey NR. Early history of magnetic resonance. Bull Mag Reson 1985; 7:94-99.   
     Rigen JS. Quantum states and precession: the two discoveries of NMR. Rev Mod Phys 1986; 58(2):433-448.

Related Questions
     Is precession the same as resonance?

←  Previous Question
Next Question  →
↑ Complete List of Questions ↑
© 2024 AD Elster, ELSTER LLC
All rights reserved.   
MRIquestions.com - Home
Donate
Please help keep this site free for everyone in the world!