Ghost Image Link

These artifacts can obscure critical anatomy of interest, requiring patient removal of jewelry and objects before imaging. 2. Computing (Symantec/Altiris Ghost)

Common culprits are earrings, metallic necklaces, hair clips, or dense anatomical structures like the cervical spine. Ghost image

"Ghosting" occurs when a faint residual image remains from a previously displayed image. This can be caused by a mismatch between the monitor's refresh rate and the video signal. These artifacts can obscure critical anatomy of interest,

Tools like Ghost32.exe or Ghost64.exe are used to verify the integrity of these images to detect corruption, as described in the Broadcom support article. 3. Display and Optics "Ghosting" occurs when a faint residual image remains

Magnified, blurry, and projected higher than the real object.

Unintentional repetition of an image or text on a printout, often caused by toner, fusing, or hardware problems.

In computer management, a "Ghost image" (often with a .gho extension) is a backup, snapshot, or cloning of a hard disk drive (HDD), solid-state drive (SSD), or partition.