In
mathematics, the
Radon transform in two dimensions, named after the Austrian mathematician
Johann Radon, is the
integral transform consisting of the integral of a function over straight lines. The transform was introduced in 1917 by Radon, who also provided a formula for the inverse transform. Radon further included formulas for the transform in three dimensions, in which the integral is taken over planes. It was later generalised to higher-dimensional
Euclidean spaces, and more broadly in the context of
integral geometry. The
complex analog of the Radon transform is known as the
Penrose transform.