Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition

Pig carcasses have been used in forensic research because they share several similarities to human cadaver, including decomposition. In several studies, the decomposition of pig’s cadaver for a certain time can be used as a model to determine the time of death of a human. This study was conducted...

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Main Authors: Oey, Lusiana Sandra, Mitrayana, Mitrayana, Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: Directorate of Research and Community Engagement UNIVERSITAS INDONESIA 2022
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Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/1/Oey_PA.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/
https://scholarhub.ui.ac.id/science/vol26/iss1/1/
https://doi.org/10.7454/mss.v26i1.1257
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spelling id-ugm-repo.2816312023-11-10T08:21:21Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/ Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition Oey, Lusiana Sandra Mitrayana, Mitrayana Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko Mathematics and Applied Sciences Pig carcasses have been used in forensic research because they share several similarities to human cadaver, including decomposition. In several studies, the decomposition of pig’s cadaver for a certain time can be used as a model to determine the time of death of a human. This study was conducted to determine the relationship between the days of spoilage of pig tissue and the level of average sound intensity produced by the sample. Then, in this study, pig skeletal muscles were allowed to decay with a variation of 1–5 days. Afterward, these muscles were imaged using diode laser-based photoacoustic tomography. Results of the experiment show that the average acoustic intensity level from the first day until the fourth day has increased (78–92 a.u for young pig and 76–86 a.u for old pig) but decreased on the fifth day (88 a.u for young and 84 a.u for old pig). These results can improve forensic imaging because such results can be applied to determine the time of death of human by plotting the ratio of the average sound intensity level of the sample to the number of days of decomposition. Directorate of Research and Community Engagement UNIVERSITAS INDONESIA 2022 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/1/Oey_PA.pdf Oey, Lusiana Sandra and Mitrayana, Mitrayana and Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko (2022) Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition. Makara Journal of Science, 6 (1). pp. 1-10. ISSN 2356-0851 https://scholarhub.ui.ac.id/science/vol26/iss1/1/ https://doi.org/10.7454/mss.v26i1.1257
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Mathematics and Applied Sciences
spellingShingle Mathematics and Applied Sciences
Oey, Lusiana Sandra
Mitrayana, Mitrayana
Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko
Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
description Pig carcasses have been used in forensic research because they share several similarities to human cadaver, including decomposition. In several studies, the decomposition of pig’s cadaver for a certain time can be used as a model to determine the time of death of a human. This study was conducted to determine the relationship between the days of spoilage of pig tissue and the level of average sound intensity produced by the sample. Then, in this study, pig skeletal muscles were allowed to decay with a variation of 1–5 days. Afterward, these muscles were imaged using diode laser-based photoacoustic tomography. Results of the experiment show that the average acoustic intensity level from the first day until the fourth day has increased (78–92 a.u for young pig and 76–86 a.u for old pig) but decreased on the fifth day (88 a.u for young and 84 a.u for old pig). These results can improve forensic imaging because such results can be applied to determine the time of death of human by plotting the ratio of the average sound intensity level of the sample to the number of days of decomposition.
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Oey, Lusiana Sandra
Mitrayana, Mitrayana
Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko
author_facet Oey, Lusiana Sandra
Mitrayana, Mitrayana
Wasono, Moh. Ali Joko
author_sort Oey, Lusiana Sandra
title Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
title_short Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
title_full Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
title_fullStr Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
title_full_unstemmed Application of a Photoacoustic Tomography System: A Case Study on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue DecompositionStudy on the Monitoring of Pig Tissue Decomposition
title_sort application of a photoacoustic tomography system: a case study on the monitoring of pig tissue decompositionstudy on the monitoring of pig tissue decomposition
publisher Directorate of Research and Community Engagement UNIVERSITAS INDONESIA
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/1/Oey_PA.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/281631/
https://scholarhub.ui.ac.id/science/vol26/iss1/1/
https://doi.org/10.7454/mss.v26i1.1257
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