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Dive into the research topics where Anton Maksimenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton Maksimenko.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2012

Analysis and interpretation of the first monochromatic X-ray tomography data collected at the Australian Synchrotron Imaging and Medical beamline.

Andrew W. Stevenson; C. Hall; Sheridan C. Mayo; Daniel Häusermann; Anton Maksimenko; Timur E. Gureyev; Yakov Nesterets; Stephen W. Wilkins; Robert A. Lewis

The first monochromatic X-ray tomography experiments conducted at the Imaging and Medical beamline of the Australian Synchrotron are reported. The sample was a phantom comprising nylon line, Al wire and finer Cu wire twisted together. Data sets were collected at four different X-ray energies. In order to quantitatively account for the experimental values obtained for the Hounsfield (or CT) number, it was necessary to consider various issues including the point-spread function for the X-ray imaging system and harmonic contamination of the X-ray beam. The analysis and interpretation of the data includes detailed considerations of the resolution and efficiency of the CCD detector, calculations of the X-ray spectrum prior to monochromatization, allowance for the response of the double-crystal Si monochromator used (via X-ray dynamical theory), as well as a thorough assessment of the role of X-ray phase-contrast effects. Computer simulations relating to the tomography experiments also provide valuable insights into these important issues. It was found that a significant discrepancy between theory and experiment for the Cu wire could be largely resolved in terms of the effect of the point-spread function. The findings of this study are important in respect of any attempts to extract quantitative information from X-ray tomography data, across a wide range of disciplines, including materials and life sciences.


Biological Reviews | 2015

Pelvic and reproductive structures in placoderms (stem gnathostomes)

Kate Trinajstic; Catherine A. Boisvert; John A. Long; Anton Maksimenko; Zerina Johanson

Newly discovered pelvic and reproductive structures within placoderms, representing some of the most crownward members of the gnathostome stem group and the most basal jawed vertebrates, challenge established ideas on the origin of the pelvic girdle and reproductive complexity. Here we critically review previous descriptions of the pelvic structures in placoderms and reinterpret the morphology of the pelvic region within the arthrodires and ptyctodonts, in particular the position of the pelvic fin and the relationship of the male clasper to the pelvic girdle. Absence of clear articular surfaces on the clasper and girdle in the Arthrodira, along with evidence from the Ptyctodontida, suggest that these are separate structures along the body. We describe similarities between the pectoral and pelvic girdles and claspers, for example, all these have both dermal and perichondral (cartilaginous) components. Claspers in placoderms and chondrichthyans develop in very different ways; in sharks, claspers develop from the pelvic fin while the claspers in placoderms develop separately, suggesting that their independent development involved a posterior extension of the ‘competent stripes’ for fin development previously limited to the region between the paired pectoral and pelvic fins. Within this expanded zone, we suggest that clasper position relative to the pelvic fins was determined by genes responsible for limb position. Information on early gnathostome reproductive processes is preserved in both the Ptyctodontida and Arthrodira, including the presence of multiple embryos in pregnant females, embryos of differing sizes and of different sexes (e.g. male claspers preserved in some embyros). By comparison with chondrichthyans, these observations suggest more complex reproductive strategies in placoderms than previously appreciated.


Frontiers in Neuroinformatics | 2014

The multi-modal Australian ScienceS Imaging and Visualization Environment (MASSIVE) high performance computing infrastructure: applications in neuroscience and neuroinformatics research

Wojtek Goscinski; Paul McIntosh; Ulrich Claus Felzmann; Anton Maksimenko; Chris Hall; Timur E. Gureyev; Darren Thompson; Andrew L. Janke; Graham J. Galloway; Neil Killeen; Parnesh Raniga; Owen Kaluza; Amanda Ng; Govinda R. Poudel; David G. Barnes; C. Paul Bonnington; Gary F. Egan

The Multi-modal Australian ScienceS Imaging and Visualization Environment (MASSIVE) is a national imaging and visualization facility established by Monash University, the Australian Synchrotron, the Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), and the Victorian Partnership for Advanced Computing (VPAC), with funding from the National Computational Infrastructure and the Victorian Government. The MASSIVE facility provides hardware, software, and expertise to drive research in the biomedical sciences, particularly advanced brain imaging research using synchrotron x-ray and infrared imaging, functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), x-ray computer tomography (CT), electron microscopy and optical microscopy. The development of MASSIVE has been based on best practice in system integration methodologies, frameworks, and architectures. The facility has: (i) integrated multiple different neuroimaging analysis software components, (ii) enabled cross-platform and cross-modality integration of neuroinformatics tools, and (iii) brought together neuroimaging databases and analysis workflows. MASSIVE is now operational as a nationally distributed and integrated facility for neuroinfomatics and brain imaging research.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

Live small-animal X-ray lung velocimetry and lung micro-tomography at the Australian Synchrotron Imaging and Medical Beamline.

Rhiannon P. Murrie; Kaye S. Morgan; Anton Maksimenko; Andreas Fouras; David M. Paganin; Chris Hall; Karen K. W. Siu; David Parsons; Martin Donnelley

The high flux and coherence produced at long synchrotron beamlines makes them well suited to performing phase-contrast X-ray imaging of the airways and lungs of live small animals. Here, findings of the first live-animal imaging on the Imaging and Medical Beamline (IMBL) at the Australian Synchrotron are reported, demonstrating the feasibility of performing dynamic lung motion measurement and high-resolution micro-tomography. Live anaesthetized mice were imaged using 30 keV monochromatic X-rays at a range of sample-to-detector propagation distances. A frame rate of 100 frames s(-1) allowed lung motion to be determined using X-ray velocimetry. A separate group of humanely killed mice and rats were imaged by computed tomography at high resolution. Images were reconstructed and rendered to demonstrate the capacity for detailed, user-directed display of relevant respiratory anatomy. The ability to perform X-ray velocimetry on live mice at the IMBL was successfully demonstrated. High-quality renderings of the head and lungs visualized both large structures and fine details of the nasal and respiratory anatomy. The effect of sample-to-detector propagation distance on contrast and resolution was also investigated, demonstrating that soft tissue contrast increases, and resolution decreases, with increasing propagation distance. This new capability to perform live-animal imaging and high-resolution micro-tomography at the IMBL enhances the capability for investigation of respiratory diseases and the acceleration of treatment development in Australia.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2013

Detectors for the imaging and medical beam line at the australian synchrotron

Chris Hall; Daniel Häusermann; Anton Maksimenko; Alberto Astolfo; Karen K. W. Siu; James T. Pearson; Andrew W. Stevenson

The Australian Synchrotron Imaging and Medical Beam Line (IMBL) began phased commissioning in late 2008 and was opened for Users this year (November, 2012). It will provide Australia with an unrivaled facility for x-ray imaging and radiotherapy research covering a wide range of applications in disease studies, treatments, and revealing physiological processes. The clinical research drivers for IMBL rely on the facilitys ability to support high spatial and contrast resolution imaging. The wide variety of demands for x-ray imaging with IMBL cannot be covered with any single detector system. A list of six detector categories was drawn up after assessing the techniques that are most likely to be used during our first years of operation. Detectors in this list will cover the fields of view, resolutions (both spatial and contrast), and frame rates required for a majority of the experiments. We present the six detectors within these categories. One detector system is the topic of a development project with the goal of producing a large field of view high aspect ratio system. Some initial design ideas are presented.


6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF SYNCHROTRON RADIATION | 2010

The Imaging and Medical Beam Line at the Australian Synchrotron

Daniel Häusermann; Chris Hall; Anton Maksimenko; Colin Campbell

As a result of the enthusiastic support from the Australian biomedical, medical and clinical communities, the Australian Synchrotron is constructing a world‐class facility for medical research, the ‘Imaging and Medical Beamline’. The IMBL began phased commissioning in late 2008 and is scheduled to commence the first clinical research programs with patients in 2011. It will provide unrivalled x‐ray facilities for imaging and radiotherapy for a wide range of research applications in diseases, treatments and understanding of physiological processes. The main clinical research drivers are currently high resolution and sensitivity cardiac and breast imaging, cell tracking applied to regenerative and stem cell medicine and cancer therapies. The beam line has a maximum source to sample distance of 136 m and will deliver a 60 cm by 4 cm x‐ray beam1—monochromatic and white—to a three storey satellite building fully equipped for pre‐clinical and clinical research. Currently operating with a 1.4 Tesla multi‐pole wig...


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2015

Characterization of Darai Limestone Composition and Porosity Using Data-Constrained Modeling and Comparison with Xenon K-Edge Subtraction Imaging.

Sheridan C. Mayo; Sam Yang; Marina Pervukhina; Michael B. Clennell; Lionel Esteban; Sarah Irvine; Karen K. Siu; Anton Maksimenko; Andrew Tulloh

Data-constrained modeling is a method that enables three-dimensional distribution of mineral phases and porosity in a sample to be modeled based on micro-computed tomography scans acquired at different X-ray energies. Here we describe an alternative method for measuring porosity, synchrotron K-edge subtraction using xenon gas as a contrast agent. Results from both methods applied to the same Darai limestone sample are compared. Reasonable agreement between the two methods and with other porosity measurements is obtained. The possibility of a combination of data-constrained modeling and K-edge subtraction methods for more accurate sample characterization is discussed.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2017

Outgassing from open and closed magma foams.

Felix W. von Aulock; Ben Kennedy; Anton Maksimenko; Fabian B. Wadsworth; Yan Lavallée

During magma ascent, bubbles nucleate, grow, coalesce, and form a variably permeable porous network. The volcanic system opens and closes as bubble walls reorganize, seal or fail. In this contribution we cause obsidian to nucleate and grow bubbles to high gas volume fraction at atmospheric pressure by heating samples to 950 oC for different times and we image the growth through a furnace. Following the experiment, we imaged the internal pore structure of selected samples in 3D and then dissected for analysis of textures and dissolved water content remnant in the glass. We demonstrate that in these high viscosity systems, during foaming and subsequent foam-maturation, bubbles near a free surface resorb via diffusion to produce an impermeable skin of melt around a foam. The skin thickens nonlinearly through time. The water concentrations at the outer and inner skin margins reflect the solubility of water in the melt at the partial pressure of water in atmospheric and water-rich bubble conditions, respectively. In this regime, mass transfer of water out of the system is diffusion limited and the sample shrinks slowly. In a second set of experiments in which we polished off the skin of the foamed samples and placed them back in the furnace, we observe rapid sample contraction and collapse of the connected pore network under surface tension as the system efficiently outgasses. In this regime, mass transfer of water is permeability limited. The mechanisms described here are relevant to the evolution of pore network heterogeneity in permeable magmas. We conclude that diffusion-driven skin formation can efficiently seal connectivity in foams. When rupture of melt film around gas bubbles (i.e. skin removal) occurs, then rapid outgassing and consequent foam collapse modulate gas pressurisation in the vesiculated magma.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2017

Micro-computed tomographic analysis of the radial geometry of intrarenal artery-vein pairs in rats and rabbits: Comparison with light microscopy

Jennifer P. Ngo; Bianca Le; Zohaib Khan; Michelle M. Kett; Bruce S. Gardiner; David W. Smith; Mayer M. Melhem; Anton Maksimenko; James T. Pearson; Roger G. Evans

We assessed the utility of synchrotron‐radiation micro‐computed tomography (micro‐CT) for quantification of the radial geometry of the renal cortical vasculature. The kidneys of nine rats and six rabbits were perfusion fixed and the renal circulation filled with Microfil. In order to assess shrinkage of Microfil, rat kidneys were imaged at the Australian Synchrotron immediately upon tissue preparation and then post fixed in paraformaldehyde and reimaged 24 hours later. The Microfil shrank only 2‐5% over the 24 hour period. All subsequent micro‐CT imaging was completed within 24 hours of sample preparation. After micro‐CT imaging, the kidneys were processed for histological analysis. In both rat and rabbit kidneys, vascular structures identified in histological sections could be identified in two‐dimensional (2D) micro‐CT images from the original kidney. Vascular morphology was similar in the two sets of images. Radial geometry quantified by manual analysis of 2D images from micro‐CT was consistent with corresponding data generated by light microscopy. However, due to limited spatial resolution when imaging a whole organ using contrast‐enhanced micro‐CT, only arteries ≥100 and ≥60 μm in diameter, for the rat and rabbit respectively, could be assessed. We conclude that it is feasible and valid to use micro‐CT to quantify vascular geometry of the renal cortical circulation in both the rat and rabbit. However, a combination of light microscopic and micro‐CT approaches are required to evaluate the spatial relationships between intrarenal arteries and veins over an extensive range of vessel size.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2016

Synchrotron X-ray CT characterization of titanium parts fabricated by additive manufacturing. Part II. Defects.

Nicola V. Y. Scarlett; Peter Tyson; Darren Fraser; Sheridan C. Mayo; Anton Maksimenko

Synchrotron X-ray tomography (SXRT) has been applied to the study of defects within three-dimensional printed titanium parts. These parts were made using the Arcam EBM(®) (electron beam melting) process which uses powdered titanium alloy, Ti64 (Ti alloy with approximately 6%Al and 4%V) as the feed and an electron beam for the sintering/welding. The experiment was conducted on the Imaging and Medical Beamline of the Australian Synchrotron. The samples represent a selection of complex shapes with a variety of internal morphologies. Inspection via SXRT has revealed a number of defects which may not otherwise have been seen. The location and nature of such defects combined with detailed knowledge of the process conditions can contribute to understanding the interplay between design and manufacturing strategy. This fundamental understanding may subsequently be incorporated into process modelling, prediction of properties and the development of robust methodologies for the production of defect-free parts.

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Chris Hall

Australian Synchrotron

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Sheridan C. Mayo

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Marina Pervukhina

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Andrew Tulloh

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Catherine A. Boisvert

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute

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Darren Thompson

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Kate Trinajstic

University of Western Australia

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Lionel Esteban

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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