The Long Road to Stockholm: The Story of Magnetic Resonance Imaging - An Autobiography
Sir Peter Mansfield- Hardcover: 240 pages
- Publisher: Oxford University Press (Feb 1 2013)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0199664544
- ISBN-13: 978-0199664542
In this autobiography, Sir Peter Mansfield describes his life from war
time childhood that initially sparked his interest in physics to his
work in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that eventually led to the
award of the Nobel Prize in 2003. Peter Mansfield grew up in London,
but was evacuated to Devon during the blitz and following the V1 and V2
attacks on London. At the end of hostilities, he worked briefly in the
printing industry before deciding to pursue his real interests in
science by joining the Rocket Propulsion Department at Westcott near
Aylesbury. Following a period of National Service and his studies at
Queen Mary College, University of London, he married and moved to the
USA for two years, returning in 1964 as a Lecturer in Physics at the
University of Nottingham. In 1972 he spent a sabbatical period in
Heidelberg, and during this period corresponded with his student, Peter
Grannell, in Nottingham on the novel idea of magnetic resonance imaging.
This led tohis first paper on MRI which was presented at the first
Specialised Colloque Ampere in 1973. During this period, he
demonstrated how the MRI radio signals can be analysed and turned into
images of the body. In 2003 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
was awarded jointly to Sir Peter and Paul Lauterbur for their crucial
achievements in the development of MRI.
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