It was introduced by Paul Funk in 1911, based on the work of Minkowski (1904).
The original motivation for studying the Funk transform was to describe Zoll metrics on the sphere.
Then, for a unit vector x, let where the integral is carried out with respect to the arclength ds of the great circle C(x) consisting of all unit vectors perpendicular to x: The Funk transform annihilates all odd functions, and so it is natural to confine attention to the case when ƒ is even.
As with the Radon transform, the inversion formula relies on the dual transform F* defined by This is the average value of the circle function ƒ over circles of arc distance p from the point x.
The inverse transform is given by The classical formulation is invariant under the rotation group SO(3).
It is also possible to formulate the Funk transform in a manner that makes it invariant under the special linear group SL(3,R) (Bailey et al. 2003).
Then, for linearly independent vectors x and y, define a function φ by the line integral taken over a simple closed curve encircling the origin once.
By a change of variables, φ satisfies and so gives a homogeneous function of degree −1 on the exterior square of R3, The function Fƒ : Λ2R3 → R agrees with the Funk transform when ƒ is the degree −2 homogeneous extension of a function on the sphere and the projective space associated to Λ2R3 is identified with the space of all circles on the sphere.
Alternatively, Λ2R3 can be identified with R3 in an SL(3,R)-invariant manner, and so the Funk transform F maps smooth even homogeneous functions of degree −2 on R3\{0} to smooth even homogeneous functions of degree −1 on R3\{0}.
The Funk-Radon transform is used in the Q-Ball method for Diffusion MRI introduced by Tuch (2004).
It is also related to intersection bodies in convex geometry.