Software tutorial at IFT: Difference between revisions

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   ROOT [0] .L openROOTFile.C+ // The + tells ROOT to compile the code
   ROOT [0] .L openROOTFile.C+ // The + tells ROOT to compile the code
   ROOT [1] Run();
   ROOT [1] Run();
Please note that it is also possible to make a complete class to read out the root files using ROOT's <code>MakeClass</code> function. See [[http://wiki.opengatecollaboration.org/index.php/Users_Guide_V7.2:Data_output#How_to_analyze_the_Root_output]].


==== Test case: Finding the range and straggling of a proton beam ====
==== Test case: Finding the range and straggling of a proton beam ====

Revision as of 09:19, 16 March 2017

Introduction and overview

This page is meant as a recipe for the software day at IFT, March 20 2017. We have decided that this should take place on Monday, March 20 between 09.00 am and 3.00 pm at the Department of Physics and Technology (our usual meeting room in the 5th floor).

There are certain steps you need to take prior to the meeting. We do not wish to loose time on installation and configuration of the software needed. Thus, it is imperative that you come with your laptops which already have the following installed and configured properly:

  1. ROOT installation
  2. Geant 4 installation
  3. Gate installation
  4. DTC Toolkit for reconstruction

Agenda for the day is as follows:

  1. An introduction to GATE macros, i.e. GATE input scripts
  2. Setting up a simple simulation geometry in GATE using a proton bencil beam and a water phantom
  3. Running short simulations
  4. Examination of the GATE-output files

We think that the above mentioned mini introduction to GATE should take no longer than 1 – 1.5 hours. Rest of the day, we will focus on a more in-depth review of the analysis code written by Helge P.

  1. Setting up a tracking calorimeter geometry in GATE
  2. Running short simulations with the detector geometry
  3. Using the results of the MC simulations, a short «hands-on» introduction to Helge P.’s analysis code written in the Root framework
  4. A review of all the different modules in the above mentioned analysis code

The final goals of the day will be:

  1. Setting up a GATE simulation of an example tracking calorimeter including geometry, material specifications and proton beam definition
  2. Being able to work with the GATE output files (identifying primary protons, secondary particles, calculating deposited dose etc…)
  3. Being able to run a complete analysis using the Root-analysis code written by Helge P.

As always, check the User guide and tutorial for the DTC Toolkit to find a Wiki-friendly guide.

GATE

Simulations of Preclinical and Clinical Scans in Emission Tomography, Transmission Tomography and Radiation Therapy

Geant4 is a C++ library, where an application / simulation is built by writing certain C++ classes (geometry, beam, scoring, output, physics), and compiling the binaries from where the simulations are run. Only certain modifications to the simulations can be made with the binaries, such as beam settings, certain physics settings as well as geometry objects pre-defined to be variable.

GATE is an application written for Geant4. It was originally meant for PET and SPECT uses, however it is very flexible so many different kinds of detectors can be designed. To run GATE, only macro files written in the Geant4 scripting language (with some GATE specific commands) are needed to build the geometry, scoring, physics and beam. The output is also defined in the macro files, either to ASCII files or to ROOT files.

In each simulation, the user has to:

  1. define the scanner geometry
  2. set up the physics processes
  3. initialize the simulation
  4. set up the detector model
  5. define the source(s)
  6. specify the data output format
  7. start the acquisition

Introduction to GATE macros

Gate, just as GEANT4, is a program in which the user interface is based on scripts. To perform actions, the user must either enter commands in interactive mode, or build up macro files containing an ordered collection of commands.

Each command performs a particular function, and may require one or more parameters. The Gate commands are organized following a tree structure, with respect to the function they represent. For example, all geometry-control commands start with geometry, and they will all be found under the /geometry/ branch of the tree structure.

When Gate is run, the Idle> prompt appears. At this stage the command interpreter is active; i.e. all the Gate commands entered will be interpreted and processed on-line. All functions in Gate can be accessed to using command lines. The geometry of the system, the description of the radioactive source(s), the physical interactions considered, etc., can be parameterized using command lines, which are translated to the Gate kernel by the command interpreter. In this way, the simulation is defined one step at a time, and the actual construction of the geometry and definition of the simulation can be seen on-line. If the effect is not as expected, the user can decide to re-adjust the desired parameter by re-entering the appropriate command on-line. Although entering commands step by step can be useful when the user is experimenting with the software or when he/she is not sure how to construct the geometry, there remains a need for storing the set of commands that led to a successful simulation.

Macros are ASCII files (with '.mac' extension) in which each line contains a command or a comment. Commands are GEANT4 or Gate scripted commands; comments start with the character ' #'. Macros can be executed from within the command interpreter in Gate, or by passing it as a command-line parameter to Gate, or by calling it from another macro. A macro or set of macros must include all commands describing the different components of a simulation in the right order. Usually these components are visualization, definitions of volumes (geometry), systems, digitizer, physics, initialization, source, output and start. These steps are described in the next sections. A single simulation may be split into several macros, for instance one for the geometry, one for the physics, etc. Usually, there is a master macro which calls the more specific macros. Splitting macros allows the user to re-use one or more of these macros in several other simulations, and/or to organize the set of all commands. To execute a macro (mymacro.mac in this example) from the Linux prompt, just type :

Gate mymacro.mac 

To execute a macro from inside the Gate environment, type after the "Idle>" prompt:

Idle>/control/execute mymacro.mac 

And finally, to execute a macro from inside another macro, simply write in the master macro:

/control/execute mymacro.mac 

Setting up a simple simulation geometry in GATE using a pencil beam and a water phantom

Visualization

First we may want to set up a visualization engine to see what's going on. This is optional, and runs in batch mode should not be visualized! Here we use the opengl visualizer OGLX, but different kinds of visualization engines are discussed in the GATE Wiki [[1]]

  /vis/open/OGLX
  /vis/viewer/reset
  /vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 60 60
  /vis/viewer/zoom 1
  /vis/viewer/set/style surface
  /vis/drawVolume
  /tracking/storeTrajectory 1
  /vis/scene/endOfEventAction accumulate
  /vis/viewer/update

Most of these commands are self explainatory. By using the storeTrajectory command, all particles are displayed together with the geometry.

Materials database

The default material assigned to a new volume is Air. The list of available materials is defined in the GateMaterials.db file. It's included in the Gate folder, and should be copied to the active directory. It is easy to add new materials to the file, just have a look at the file.

  /gate/geometry/setMaterialDatabase MyMaterialDatabase.db

Geometry

Apart from specialized geometries such as PET, SPECT, CT, the general geometry is called as scanner. It must be placed within the world volume, and all parts of the detector (to be scored) be placed within the scanner volume.

To construct a simple water phantom geometry of 30x30x30 cm, use the following commands:

  /gate/world/geometry/setXLength 1000. cm
  /gate/world/geometry/setYLength 1000. cm
  /gate/world/geometry/setZLength 1000. cm

So we've defined a world geometry of 1 m3. It must be larger than all its daughter volumes. Let's put the scanner volume inside the world volume. Since it's not already defined (the world volume was), we must insert a box object (with parameters XLength, YLength, ZLength as the side measurements of the box):

  /gate/world/daughters/name scanner
  /gate/world/daughters/insert box
  /gate/scanner/geometry/setXLength 100. cm
  /gate/scanner/geometry/setYLength 100. cm
  /gate/scanner/geometry/setZLength 100. cm
  /gate/scanner/vis/forceWireframe

Inside this scanner volume (the default material is Air), let's finally put the water phantom (to start at [math]\displaystyle{ z=0 }[/math]):

  /gate/scanner/daughters/name phantom
  /gate/scanner/daughters/insert box
  /gate/phantom/geometry/setXLength 30. cm
  /gate/phantom/geometry/setYLength 30. cm
  /gate/phantom/geometry/setZLength 30. cm
  /gate/phantom/placement/setTranslation 0 0 -35. cm # - 100/2 + 30/2
  /gate/phantom/setMaterial Water
  /gate/phantom/vis/forceWireframe

Sensitive Detectors

The scoring system in Geant4/GATE is based around Sensitive Detectors (SD). If a volume is a daughter volume (or granddaughter, ...), it may be assigned as a SD. This process is super simple in GATE:

  /gate/phantom/attachCrystalSD

Physics

There are many physics lists to choose from in Geant4/GATE. For proton therapy and detector simulations, I most often use a combination of a low-energy-friendly hadronic list and the variable-steplength (for Bragg Peak accuracy) electromagnetic list. From the Geant4 reference physics webpage [[2]]:

  • QGSP: QGSP is the basic physics list applying the quark gluon string model for high energy interactions of protons, neutrons, pions, and Kaons and nuclei. The high energy interaction creates an exited nucleus, which is passed to the precompound model modeling the nuclear de-excitation.
  • QGSP_BIC: Like QGSP, but using Geant4 Binary cascade for primary protons and neutrons with energies below ~10GeV, thus replacing the use of the LEP model for protons and neutrons In comparison to teh LEP model, Binary cascade better describes production of secondary particles produced in interactions of protons and neutrons with nuclei.
  • emstandard_opt3 designed for any applications required higher accuracy of electrons, hadrons and ion tracking without magnetic field. It is used in extended electromagnetic examples and in the QGSP_BIC_EMY reference Physics List. The corresponding physics

The physics list to use all of these is called QGSP_BIC_EMY. It is loaded with the command

  /gate/physics/addPhysicsList QGSP_BIC_EMY

In addition, in order to accurately represent the water in the water phantom, we define the current recommended value for the mean ionization potential for water, which is [math]\displaystyle{ 75\ \mathrm{eV} }[/math]. This can be performed for all materials, and it will override Bragg's additivity rule.

  /gate/geometry/setIonisationPotential Water 75 eV

Initialization

After the geometry and physics has been set, initialize the run!

  /gate/run/initialize

Proton beam

  /gate/source/addSource PBS PencilBeam
  /gate/source/PBS/setParticleType proton
  /gate/source/PBS/setEnergy 188.0 MeV
  /gate/source/PBS/setSigmaEnergy 1.0 MeV
  /gate/source/PBS/setPosition 0 0 -10. mm
  /gate/source/PBS/setSigmaX 2 mm
  /gate/source/PBS/setSigmaY 4 mm
  /gate/source/PBS/setSigmaTheta 3.3 mrad
  /gate/source/PBS/setSigmaPhi 3.8 mrad
  /gate/source/PBS/setEllipseXThetaEmittance 15 mm*mrad
  /gate/source/PBS/setEllipseXThetaRotationNorm negative
  /gate/source/PBS/setEllipseYPhiEmittance 20 mm*mrad
  /gate/source/PBS/setEllipseYPhiRotationNorm negative
  /gate/application/setTotalNumberOfPrimaries 5000

It is tricky to use this beam since all parameters need to match, so an alternative is to use a uniform General Particle Source:

  /gate/source/addSource uniformBeam gps
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/particle proton
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/ene/type Gauss
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/ene/mono 188 MeV
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/ene/sigma 1 MeV
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/type Plane
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/shape Square
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/direction 0 0 1
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/halfx 0 mm
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/halfy 0 mm
  /gate/source/uniformBeam/gps/centre 0 0 -1 cm
  /gate/application/setTotalNumberOfPrimaries 5000

Output

For this tutorial, we will use the ROOT output.

  /gate/output/root/enable
  /gate/output/root/setFileName gate_simulation

Running the simulation

To finalize the macro file, start the randomization engine and run!

  /gate/random/setEngineName MersenneTwister
  /gate/random/setEngineSeed auto
  /gate/application/start

Running short simulations

To run a simulation, create a macro file with the lines as descibed above, and run it with

  $ Gate waterphantom.mac

The terminal output describes the geometry, physics, etc.


It is also possible to use aliases in the macro file. For example, to simplify the energy selection, substitute with the line

  /gate/source/PBS/setEnergy {energy} MeV

and run the macro with

  $ Gate -a '[energy,175]' waterphantom.mac

Multiple aliases can be stacked:

  $ Gate -a '[energy,175] [phantomsize,45]' waterphantom.mac

if you have defined multiple alises in the macro file. It is sadly not possible to do calculations in the macro language, so you have to do that through bash (newvalue=`echo "$oldvalue/2" | bc`).

Examination of the GATE output files

The ROOT output file(s) from the simulation can be opened several ways:

  • By using the built-in TBrowser to look at scoring variable distributions
  • By using loading the ROOT Tree into a C++ program and looping over events (interactions)

Using the built-in TBrowser

The hierarchy for the files are shown in the image below:

In Gate, the TTree is called Hits, and the leaves are named after the different variables that are automatically scored:

  PDGEncoding      - The Particle ID
  trackID          - Track number following a mother particle
  parentID         - The parent track's event ID. 0 if the current particle is a beam particle
  time             - Time in simulation (for ToF in PET, etc.)
  edep             - Deposited energy in this event / interaction
  stepLength       - The length of the current step
  posX             - Global X position of event
  posY             - Global Y position of event
  posZ             - Global Z position of event
  localPosX        - Local (in mother volume) X position of event
  localPosY        - Local (in mother volume) Y position of event
  localPosZ        - Local (in mother volume) Z position of event
  baseID           - ID of mother volume scanner, == 0 if only one scanner defined
  level1ID         - ID of 1st level of volume hierarchy
  level2ID         - ID of 2nd level of volume hierarchy
  level3ID         - ID of 3rd level of volume hierarchy
  level4ID         - ID of 4th level of volume hierarchy
  sourcePosX       - Global X position of source particle
  sourcePosY       - Global Y position of source particle
  sourcePosZ       - Global X position of source particle
  eventID          - History number (important!!)
  volumeID         - ID of current volume (useful to isolate particles in a specific part of a fully scored volume)
  processName      - A string containing the name of the interaction type:
     - hIoni: Ionization by hadron
     - Transportation: No special interactions (usually from step limiter)
     - eIoni: Ionization by electron
     - ProtonInelastic: Inelastic nuclear interaction of proton
     - compt: Compton scattering
     - ionIoni: Ionization by ion
     - msc: Multiple Coulomb Scattering process
     - hadElastic: Elastic hadron / proton scattering

An example of the distribution of eventID (in histogram form, this is the number of interactions per particle (if bin size = 1))

  $ root
  ROOT [0] new TBrowser

Or for the Z distribution (see the Bragg Peak)

Opening the files in C++

It is quite simple to open the generated ROOT files in a C++ program.

In openROOTFile.C:

  #include <TTree.h>
  #include <TFile.h>
  
  using namespace std;
  
  void Run() {
     TFile *f = new TFile("gate_simulation.root");
     TTree *tree = (TTree*) f->Get("Hits"); // The TTree in the GATE file is called Hits
     
     // Declare the variables (leafs) to be readout
     Float_t x,y,z,edep;
     Int_t eventID, parentID;
     
     // Make a connection between the declared variables and the leafs
     tree->SetBranchAddress("posX", &x);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("posY", &y);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("posZ", &z);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("edep", &edep);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("eventID", &eventID);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("parentID", &parentID);
     
     // Loop over all the entries in the tree
     for (Int_t i=0, i < tree->GetEntries(); ++i) {
        tree->GetEntry(i);
        if (eventID > 2) break; // To limit the output!
        if (parentID != 0) continue; // Only show results from primary particles
  
        printf("Primary particle with event ID %d has an interaction with %.2f MeV energy loss at (x,y,z) = (%.2f, %.2f, %.2f).\n", eventID, edep, x, y, z);
     }
  
     delete f;
     }

Then you can run the program with

  $ root
  ROOT [0] .L openROOTFile.C+ // The + tells ROOT to compile the code
  ROOT [1] Run();


Please note that it is also possible to make a complete class to read out the root files using ROOT's MakeClass function. See [[3]].

Test case: Finding the range and straggling of a proton beam

  #include <TTree.h>
  #include <TH1F.h>
  #include <TFile.h>
  
  using namespace std;
  
  void Run() {
     TFile  * f = new TFile("gate_simulation.root");
     TTree  * tree = (TTree*) f->Get("Hits"); // The TTree in the GATE file is called Hits
     TH1F   * rangeHistogram = new TH1F("rangeHistogram", "Stopping position for protons"; 800, 0, 400); // Histogram 1D with Float values
  
     Float_t  z;
     Int_t    eventID, parentID;¨
  
     Int_t    lastEventID = -1;
     Float_t  lastZ = -1;
     
     tree->SetBranchAddress("posZ", &z);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("eventID", &eventID);
     tree->SetBranchAddress("parentID", &parentID);
     
     for (Int_t i=0, i < tree->GetEntries(); ++i) {
        tree->GetEntry(i);
        if (parentID != 0) continue;
        
        // Check if this is the first event of a primary particle
        if (eventID != lastEventID && lastEventID >= 0) {
           rangeHistogram->Fill(lastZ);
        }
  
        // Store the current variables
        lastZ = z;
        lastEventID = eventID;
     }
  
     rangeHistogram->Draw();
   
     // Make a Gaussian fit to the range
     TF1 * fit = new TF1("fit", "gaus");
     rangeHistogram->Fit("fit", "", 350, 400); // Most probable values for fit is in this range, ROOT is quite sensitive to Gaussians occupying only a small part of the histogram, so give narrow fit range
  
     printf("The range of the proton beam is %.3f +- %.3f mm.\n", fit->GetParameter(1), fit->GetParameter(2));  
  }

This time, the program will yield the following output (from a 250 MeV beam):

  The range of the proton beam is 378.225 mm +- 3.791 mm

With the following histogram (I've added some color and a SetOptFit to the legend)

Review of the analysis code by Helge Pettersen

Setting up a tracking calorimeter geometry in GATE

Running short simulations with the detector geometry

"Hands on" to the analysis code

A review of the different modules in the code

DISCLAIMER: Some of the materials have been copied from the GATE v7.2 User's guide: http://wiki.opengatecollaboration.org/index.php/Users_Guide_V7.2