We describe the first in vivo imaging determination of normal lung tissue's multiexponential transverse magnetization decay. Normal spontaneously breathing rats were used for the measurements. To obtain motion‐insensitive images, we used a modified line scan imaging technique which we call the interleaved line scan (ILS). The ILS overcomes the following difficulties associated with imaging lungs: low signal‐to‐noise ratio (S/N) due to lung's low proton density and short T2 decay, artifacts associated with cardiac and respiratory motion, and excessively long imaging times with conventional line scan techniques. Using the ILS, a 16‐line 32‐average image with an 8‐s repetition time requires 4.3 min. From a series of 16 Hahn spin‐echo images with echo times ranging from 16 to 90 ms, we obtained a two‐component T2 decay for normal peripheml lung tissue. The measured fast and slow T2 components were 9.5 ± 1.0 and 34 ± 5.0 ms for the right lung and 9.0 ± 1.5 and 32 ± 4.5 for the left lung. The relative magnetization for the slow T2 component was 7.0 ± 4.5% for the right lung and 10 ± 3.0% for the left lung. © 1990 Academic Press, Inc. Copyright © 1990 Wiley‐Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company