09 | Gradient - Moment

: Prevents "ghost" artifacts in the phase-encoding direction caused by moving blood or CSF.

In the context of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), —often discussed in "Moment 09" or similar lecture series like Rad229 (2020) —is a technique used to minimize motion artifacts, particularly from blood flow or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). What is Gradient Moment Nulling (GMN)? Gradient - Moment 09

: To make the magnetic resonance signal immune to phase errors caused by constant velocity motion. : Prevents "ghost" artifacts in the phase-encoding direction

: Returns high signal intensity to bright, moving fluids, making them appear "bright" and uniform on T2-weighted images. Key Concepts in "Moment 09" : To make the magnetic resonance signal immune

GMN, also known as , involves adding extra gradient pulses (lobes) to a pulse sequence to ensure that moving spins do not accumulate a net phase by the time the echo is formed.

: Additional gradient lobes are designed so that the "first moment" (the integral of gradient strength over time multiplied by time) equals zero at the echo time. Result :