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- Artronix abstract "Artronix Incorporated began in 1970 and has roots in a project in a computer science class at Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis. The class designed, built and tested a 12-bit minicomputer, which later evolved to become the PC12 minicomputer. The new company entered the bio-medical computing market with a set of peripherals and software for use in Radiation Treatment Planning (see http://radiology.rsna.org/content/217/3/619.full and http://radiology.rsna.org/content/110/1/183.abstract?ijkey=0b4627e88e8f664042bd9c37c4243549b5b8b2ea&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha) and ultrasound scanning. Software for the PC12 was written in assembly language and FORTRAN; later software was written in MUMPS. The company was located in two buildings in the Hanley Industrial Park off South Hanley Road in Maplewood, Missouri.The company later developed another product line of brain-scanning or computed tomography equipment based on the Lockheed SUE 16-bit minicomputer (see also Pluribus); later designs included an optional vector processor using AMD Am2900 bipolar bit-slices to speed tomographic reconstruction calculations. In contrast to earlier designs, the Artronix scanner used a fan-shaped beam with 128 detectors on a rotating gantry. The system would take 540 degrees of data (1½ rotations) to average out noise in the samples. The beam allowed 3mm slices, but several slices would routinely be mathematically combined into one image for display purposes. The first generation of scanners was a head scanner while a later generation was a whole-body scanner. The CAT-3 (computerized axial tomography) system was a success at first, but the technology gave way to PET (positron emission tomography) and MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) systems. Artronix closed its doors in 1978.Artronix was founded by Arne Roestel. Mr. Roestel went on to found Multidata Systems International.".
- Artronix wikiPageExternalLink ContactUs.html.
- Artronix wikiPageExternalLink 183.abstract?ijkey=0b4627e88e8f664042bd9c37c4243549b5b8b2ea&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha).
- Artronix wikiPageExternalLink 619.full.
- Artronix wikiPageExternalLink u851315648355202.
- Artronix wikiPageID "1005852".
- Artronix wikiPageLength "2789".
- Artronix wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Artronix wikiPageRevisionID "707448303".
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink 12-bit.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink 16-bit.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink AMD_Am2900.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Advanced_Micro_Devices.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Assembly_language.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink CT_scan.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Category:Companies_based_in_Missouri.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Category:Electronics_companies_of_the_United_States.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Fortran.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Lockheed_Corporation.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink MUMPS.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Magnetic_resonance_imaging.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Maplewood,_Missouri.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Minicomputer.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Multidata_Systems_International.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Neuroradiology.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink PC12_minicomputer.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Peripheral.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Pluribus.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Positron_emission_tomography.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Software.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink St._Louis.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Tomographic_reconstruction.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Vector_processor.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLink Washington_University_in_St._Louis.
- Artronix wikiPageWikiLinkText "Artronix".
- Artronix wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Artronix wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_web.
- Artronix wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Compu-hardware-stub.
- Artronix subject Category:Companies_based_in_Missouri.
- Artronix subject Category:Electronics_companies_of_the_United_States.
- Artronix type Company.
- Artronix type Company.
- Artronix type Organization.
- Artronix type Organization.
- Artronix comment "Artronix Incorporated began in 1970 and has roots in a project in a computer science class at Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis. The class designed, built and tested a 12-bit minicomputer, which later evolved to become the PC12 minicomputer.".
- Artronix label "Artronix".
- Artronix sameAs Q4801408.
- Artronix sameAs m.03yl7k.
- Artronix sameAs Q4801408.
- Artronix wasDerivedFrom Artronix?oldid=707448303.
- Artronix isPrimaryTopicOf Artronix.