NSF Home IMAGE LIBRARY HOME Contact NSF Image Library How to Use the NSF Image Library
Image Information


IMAGE SEARCH
ALL IMAGES
NEW ADDITIONS TO THE LIBRARY
NEWS IMAGES
NSF SENIOR STAFF
OTHER PHOTO SOURCES

First Magnetic Resonance Scanner

Caption:

Drs. Raymond Damadian, Lawrence Minkoff, and Michael Goldsmith (left to right) and the completed Indomitable (the world’s first magnetic resonance scanner) that performed the first scan of a live human being. NSF-supported fundamental research led to the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology. [See related images: Sagittal MRI Image of Brain and First Human MRI Scan.]

More about this Image
Fundamental research, supported by the NSF, led to the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology. MRI is widely used in hospitals for purposes like detecting tumors and internal tissue damage in patients, and investigating differences in brain tissue.

MRI technology works like this. An MRI imager surrounds a patient with magnets. The magnetic field created by the magnets causes atomic nuclei in the patient’s body to line up parallel to the field. A coil in the imager jars the nuclei with radio waves. They resonate, producing a faint radio signal that a computer amplifies and translates into an image. Unlike X-rays or CAT scans, MRI lets doctors distinguish blood vessels from malignant tissue.

First Magnetic Resonance Scanner
(Preview Only)

Credit: Courtesy FONAR Corporation
Year of Image: 1977

Categories:

HISTORICAL
MATHEMATICAL / General
PHYSICS / Nuclear Physics

Formats Available:

Restrictions:

No additional restrictions--beyond NSF's general restrictions--have been placed on this image. For a list of general restrictions that apply to this and all images in the NSF Image Library, see the section "Conditions".

Image Library HomeNSF HomeOffice of Legislative and Public Affairs Home


The National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA
Tel: 703-292-5111
FIRS: 800-877-8339 ~ TDD: 703-292-5090

Last Modified: Mar 29, 2001