Projection-slice theorem


In mathematics, the projection-slice theorem, central slice theorem or Fourier slice theorem in two dimensions states that the results of the following two calculations are equal:
In operator terms, if
then:
This idea can be extended to higher dimensions.
This theorem is used, for example, in the analysis of medical
CT scans where a "projection" is an x-ray
image of an internal organ. The Fourier transforms of these images are
seen to be slices through the Fourier transform of the 3-dimensional
density of the internal organ, and these slices can be interpolated to build
up a complete Fourier transform of that density. The inverse Fourier transform
is then used to recover the 3-dimensional density of the object. This technique was first derived by Ronald N. Bracewell in 1956 for a radio astronomy problem.

The projection-slice theorem in ''N'' dimensions

In N dimensions, the projection-slice theorem states that the
Fourier transform of the projection of an N-dimensional function
f onto an m-dimensional linear submanifold
is equal to an m-dimensional slice of the N-dimensional Fourier transform of that
function consisting of an m-dimensional linear submanifold through the origin in the Fourier space which is parallel to the projection submanifold. In operator terms:

The generalized Fourier-slice theorem

In addition to generalizing to N dimensions, the projection-slice theorem can be further generalized with an arbitrary change of basis. For convenience of notation, we consider the change of basis to be represented as B, an N-by-N invertible matrix operating on N-dimensional column vectors. Then the generalized Fourier-slice theorem can be stated as:

Proof in two dimensions

The projection-slice theorem is easily proven for the case of two dimensions.
Without loss of generality, we can take the projection line to be the x-axis.
There is no loss of generality because if we use a shifted and rotated line, the law still applies. Using a shifted line gives the same projection and therefore the same 1D Fourier transform results. The rotated function is the Fourier pair of the rotated Fourier transform, for which the theorem again holds.
If f is a two-dimensional function, then the projection of f onto the x axis is p where
The Fourier transform of is
The slice is then
which is just the Fourier transform of p. The proof for higher dimensions is easily generalized from the above example.

The FHA cycle

If the two-dimensional function f is circularly symmetric, it may be represented as f where r = |r|. In this case the projection onto any projection line
will be the Abel transform of f. The two-dimensional Fourier transform
of f will be a circularly symmetric function given by the zeroth order Hankel transform of f, which will therefore also represent any slice through the origin. The projection-slice theorem then states that the Fourier transform of the projection equals the slice or
where A1 represents the Abel transform operator, projecting a two-dimensional circularly symmetric function onto a one-dimensional line, F1 represents the 1-D Fourier transform
operator, and H represents the zeroth order Hankel transform operator.

Extension to fan beam or cone-beam CT

The projection-slice theorem is suitable for CT image reconstruction with parallel beam projections. It does not directly apply to fanbeam or conebeam CT. The theorem was extended to fan-beam and conebeam CT image reconstruction by Shuang-ren Zhao in 1995.