Reconstruction

Definizione

the mathematical inversion of 2D projections into a 3D volume

Sinonimi:
CT ReconstructionVolumetric Reconstruction3D Reconstruction

What is Reconstruction?

Reconstruction refers to the mathematical inversion of 2D projections into a 3D volume. The topic is a methodological foundation for reliable CT data, because it directly affects detection limits, measurement capability and reproducibility.

Scientific background

The scientific basis is rooted in the physical interaction of X-ray radiation with matter and in the mathematical data processing of projections. Particularly relevant are FDK back-projection, iterative algorithms and regularisation. For technical decisions, these relationships must be understood as a quantifiable measurement chain.

Relevant key metrics

  • Spatial resolution, contrast-to-noise ratio and measurement uncertainty are the central parameters.
  • Systematic effects are controlled via calibration, reference standards and repeat measurements.
  • Parameter changes must be evaluated for robustness and transferability to series production conditions.

Standards and thresholds

  • Standards: ISO 15708-2:2025 and ISO 15708-3:2025 (principles, operation and interpretation).
  • Typical thresholds (in practice): Reconstruction parameters are considered released when reference standards and repeat measurements deliver stable results within the target uncertainty.
  • Validity: Parameters are not universally transferable; every significant change requires requalification.

Application in industrial practice

  • Design of valid scan parameters for defect and measurement tasks.
  • Objective interpretation of CT findings in development and series production.
  • Comparability of results across systems, batches and time points.

Sources and reference date

  • ISO 15708-2:2025.
  • ISO 15708-3:2025.
  • Reference date: February 2026.