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2386.
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2385.
94) Peterson Number
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2383.
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2382.
2224) Pierre Agostini
Gist:
Work
Electronic motions initiate processes that create and maintain life, and are behind the exchange of energy between light and matter. These are arguably the most important motions for human life, evolving in hundreds of attoseconds. Attosecond pulses allow us to capture them inside atoms, molecules and solids. In 2001, Pierre Agostini succeeded in producing and investigating a series of consecutive light pulses, in which each pulse lasted just 250 attoseconds. Potential applications of attosecond pulses include in electronics and medical diagnostics.
Summary
Pierre Agostini (born July 23, 1941, Tunis, Tunisia) is a French physicist who was awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics for his experiments with attosecond pulses of light. He shared the prize with French physicist Anne L’Huillier and Hungarian physicist Ferenc Krausz. An attosecond is 10−18 second, or a billionth of a billionth of a second. When electrons move in atoms and molecules, they move on attosecond timescales. By generating pulses of light that last tens or hundreds of attoseconds, scientists can study the movements of electrons.
Agostini was born in Tunis in Tunisia, then a French protectorate. He attended Prytanée Militaire La Flèche in La Flèche, France, completing his baccalauréat (a secondary-education degree) in mathematics in 1959. He studied physics at the Université Aix-Marseille, in Marseille, France, completing his undergraduate degree in 1961, his master’s in advanced studies in 1962, and his doctorate in 1968.
Agostini spent much of his professional career at the Centre d’Études de Saclay near Paris, where between 1969 and 2002 he served as a researcher, a senior researcher, a scientific adviser, and the institution’s director of research. During this period he also held brief appointments as a visiting scientist at the University of Southern California, the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM) in Amsterdam, Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York, and Université Laval physics department in Quebec City, Quebec. He joined the faculty of the Ohio State University in 2005.
In the 1980s and ’90s L’Huillier and collaborators showed that when an infrared laser was fired through a highly ionized noble gas, the higher harmonics of the laser beam (that is, light with a frequency that is an integer multiple of that of the initial laser beam) would not decrease in intensity. This phenomenon is called high-harmonic generation (HHG). Once L’Huiller and her collaborators explained the mechanics of HHG, they were able to show that such high harmonics could be added together to form light pulses tens or hundreds of attoseconds long.
Agostini and his group were among the first to generate attosecond pulses and published their results in 2001. They used an infrared laser shone through argon gas and were able to produce a train of pulses, each lasting 250 attoseconds. (Krausz and his group were working independently at the same time and produced isolated pulses lasting 650 attoseconds.)
Agostini was the recipient of several awards, including the Gustave Ribaud Prize for Physics from the French Academy of Sciences in 1995, the Joop Los Award from FOM in the Netherlands in 2003, and the William F. Meggers Award from the Optical Society of America (OSA, now Optica) in 2007, the latter of which was for his investigations into the responses of atoms and molecules subjected to infrared laser pulses. He became an elected fellow of OSA in 2008. He has authored more than 120 publications.
Details
Pierre Agostini (born 23 July 1941) is a French experimental physicist and Emeritus professor at the Ohio State University in the United States, known for his pioneering work in strong-field laser physics and attosecond science. He is especially known for the observation of above-threshold ionization and the invention of the reconstruction of attosecond beating by interference of two-photon transitions (RABBITT) technique for characterization of attosecond light pulses. He was jointly awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Education and career
Pierre Agostini was born in Tunis, in the French protectorate of Tunisia, in 1941. He obtained his baccalauréat at the Prytanée national militaire school in 1959 in La Flèche, France.
Agostini studied physics at Aix-Marseille University, where he subsequently received a B.Ed. degree (licence d'enseignement) in physics in 1961, and an M.A.S. degree (diplôme d'études approfondies) in 1962. In 1968 he completed a doctoral degree there, on multilayer dielectric filters for the ultraviolet, titled Appareillage permettant la réalisation de filtres multidiélectriques UV : Étude des couches Sb2O3.
After his doctorate, he became a researcher at CEA Saclay in 1969 and stayed there until 2002. During this time, Agostini worked in the lab of Gérard Mainfray and Claude Manus, where he researched on multiphoton ionization using the powerful lasers there. They are the first to observe above-threshold ionization in 1979 in xenon gas.
In 2001, Agostini and his team at CEA Saclay along with Harm Geert Muller at the Dutch Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM), using an advanced laser at the Laboratoire d'Optique Appliquée [fr], managed to create a train of pulses each 250 attoseconds in duration. By recombining the ultrashort ultraviolet pulses with the original infrared light they created an interference effect that allowed him to characterize the length and repetition rate of the pulses.
Agostini was a visiting scientist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in the U.S. state of New York between 2002 and 2004, where he worked in Louis F. DiMauro's group. He became professor of physics at the Ohio State University (OSU) in 2005 and ran a laboratory jointly with Louis F. DiMauro who moved a year earlier to OSU. Agostini became Emeritus professor at OSU in 2018.
Honors and awards
Agostini received the Gustave Ribaud prize in 1995 from the French Academy of Sciences. In 2003, he received the Gay-Lussac–Humboldt Prize and the Joop Los fellowship from the Dutch Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM), he also received the William F. Meggers Award in Spectroscopy in 2007 from the Optical Society of America (OSA), and is a Humboldt Fellow. He was elected a Fellow of OSA in 2008 “for leadership in the development of innovative experiments providing major insights into the dynamics of the nonlinear response of atoms and molecules submitted to strong infrared laser pulses.”
In 2023, he received the Nobel Prize in Physics for "for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter" along with Anne L'Huillier and Ferenc Krausz.
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Welcome to the forum!
Hi,
2381.
Q: What part of a computer does a spider use?
A: The webcam.
* * *
Q: What happens when a Buddhist becomes totally absorbed with the computer he is working with?
A: He enters Nerdvana.
* * *
Q: Why did Jack and Jill "really" go up the hill?
A: To get better Wi-fi.
* * *
Q: What was the spider doing on the computer?
A: Searching the web!
* * *
Q: Why can't an elephant use a computer?
A: He's too afraid of the mouse.
* * *
Classic Quotes - I
1. Anytime you get action legends together, it has to be a classic. - Chuck Norris
2. I had the classic 40 meltdown. I did. It's embarrassing. It was pretty funny. But then I recovered. To me, it was like a second adolescence. Hormonally, my body was changing, my mind was changing, and so my relationship to myself and the world around me came to this assault of finiteness. - Keanu Reeves
3. 'Classic.' A book which people praise and don't read. - Mark Twain
4. Instead of stubbornly attempting to use surrealism for purposes of subversion, it is necessary to try to make of surrealism something as solid, complete and classic as the works of museums. - Salvador Dali
5. If I could wear any label forever it would be Burberry. It covers a huge span of stuff. You can't go wrong with a classic trench and a pair of jeans. - Emma Watson
6. I grew up in the classic American-Jewish suburbia, which has a whole different sense of what it means to be Jewish than anywhere else in the world. - Natalie Portman
7. Wally Amos is the classic example of a man who gets up again and again. - Zig Ziglar
8. I like to find things that are unconventional and make them look classic, because if I'm forcing something, you can just tell. - Selena Gomez.
Thermocouple
Gist
A thermocouple, a temperature-measuring device consisting of two wires of different metals joined at each end. One junction is placed where the temperature is to be measured, and the other is kept at a constant lower temperature.
Summary
A thermocouple, a temperature-measuring device consisting of two wires of different metals joined at each end. One junction is placed where the temperature is to be measured, and the other is kept at a constant lower temperature. A measuring instrument is connected in the circuit. The temperature difference causes the development of an electromotive force (known as the Seebeck effect) that is approximately proportional to the difference between the temperatures of the two junctions. Temperature can be read from standard tables, or the measuring instrument can be calibrated to read temperature directly.
Any two different metals or metal alloys exhibit the thermoelectric effect, but only a few are used as thermocouples—e.g., antimony and bismuth, copper and iron, or copper and constantan (a copper-nickel alloy). Usually platinum, either with rhodium or a platinum-rhodium alloy, is used in high-temperature thermocouples. Thermocouple types are named (e.g., type E [nickel, chromium, and constantan], J [iron and constantan], N [two nickel-silicon alloys, one of which contains chromium and magnesium], or B [a platinum-rhodium alloy]) according to the metals used to make the wires. The most common type is K (nickel-aluminum and nickel-chromium wires) because of its wide temperature range (from about −200 to 1,260 °C [−300 to 2,300 °F]) and low cost.
A thermopile is a number of thermocouples connected in series. Its results are comparable to the average of several temperature readings. A series circuit also gives greater sensitivity, as well as greater power output, which can be used to operate a device such as a safety valve in a gas stove without the use of external power. a temperature-measuring device consisting of two wires of different metals joined at each end. One junction is placed where the temperature is to be measured, and the other is kept at a constant lower temperature.
Details
A thermocouple, also known as a "thermoelectrical thermometer", is an electrical device consisting of two dissimilar electrical conductors forming an electrical junction. A thermocouple produces a temperature-dependent voltage as a result of the Seebeck effect, and this voltage can be interpreted to measure temperature. Thermocouples are widely used as temperature sensors.
Commercial thermocouples are inexpensive, interchangeable, are supplied with standard connectors, and can measure a wide range of temperatures. In contrast to most other methods of temperature measurement, thermocouples are self-powered and require no external form of excitation. The main limitation with thermocouples is accuracy; system errors of less than one degree Celsius (°C) can be difficult to achieve.
Thermocouples are widely used in science and industry. Applications include temperature measurement for kilns, gas turbine exhaust, diesel engines, and other industrial processes. Thermocouples are also used in homes, offices and businesses as the temperature sensors in thermostats, and also as flame sensors in safety devices for gas-powered appliances.
Principle of operation
In 1821, the German physicist Thomas Johann Seebeck discovered that a magnetic needle held near a circuit made up of two dissimilar metals got deflected when one of the dissimilar metal junctions was heated. At the time, Seebeck referred to this consequence as thermo-magnetism. The magnetic field he observed was later shown to be due to thermo-electric current. In practical use, the voltage generated at a single junction of two different types of wire is what is of interest as this can be used to measure temperature at very high and low temperatures. The magnitude of the voltage depends on the types of wire being used. Generally, the voltage is in the microvolt range and care must be taken to obtain a usable measurement. Although very little current flows, power can be generated by a single thermocouple junction. Power generation using multiple thermocouples, as in a thermopile, is common.
Additional Information
A thermocouple is a sensor for measuring temperature. This sensor consists of two dissimilar metal wires, joined at one end, and connected to a thermocouple thermometer or other thermocouple-capable device at the other end. When properly configured, thermocouples can provide temperature measurements over wide range of temperatures.
Thermocouples are known for their versatility as temperature sensors therefore commonly used on a wide range of applications - from an industrial usage thermocouple to a regular thermocouple found on utilities and regular appliances. Due to their wide range of models and technical specifications, it is extremely important to understand its basic structure, how it works, its ranges as to better determine what is the right type and material of thermocouple for your application.
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#10377. What does the term in Physics Quartz mean?
#10378. What does the term in Physics Radiation mean?
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#5565. What does the noun opportunist mean?
#5566. What does the noun oppressor mean?
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#2374. What does the medical term Reticular fiber mean?
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#9637.
2321) Canal
Gist
A canal is a long, man-made strip of water used for irrigation or boat access to a bigger body of water, like the famous Erie Canal, which connects the Hudson River to Lake Erie.
Canal is related to the word channel, and all its different shades of meaning have to do with tunnel shaped spaces that carry liquid from one place to another. Besides man-made irrigation canals, canals that connect boat docks to rivers and oceans, or street-like canals in boat cities like Amsterdam, there are canals in your body, like your nasal canal, or the birth canal you came out of. It's also a verb meaning "to dig a canal."
Summary
A canal is a waterway made by humans. For many centuries, canals have been built as a way of transporting heavy goods in barges or boats. Canals often connect lakes, rivers, or oceans. The Panama Canal is a famous canal that connects the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific Ocean. Many canals are reinforced with clay or concrete on the sides and have locks. Other canals are used for irrigation or hydropower.
Details
Canals or artificial waterways are waterways or engineered channels built for drainage management (e.g. flood control and irrigation) or for conveyancing water transport vehicles (e.g. water taxi). They carry free, calm surface flow under atmospheric pressure, and can be thought of as artificial rivers.
In most cases, a canal has a series of dams and locks that create reservoirs of low speed current flow. These reservoirs are referred to as slack water levels, often just called levels. A canal can be called a navigation canal when it parallels a natural river and shares part of the latter's discharges and drainage basin, and leverages its resources by building dams and locks to increase and lengthen its stretches of slack water levels while staying in its valley.
A canal can cut across a drainage divide atop a ridge, generally requiring an external water source above the highest elevation. The best-known example of such a canal is the Panama Canal.
Many canals have been built at elevations, above valleys and other waterways. Canals with sources of water at a higher level can deliver water to a destination such as a city where water is needed. The Roman Empire's aqueducts were such water supply canals.
The term was once used to describe linear features seen on the surface of Mars, Martian canals, an optical illusion.
Types of artificial waterways
A navigation is a series of channels that run roughly parallel to the valley and stream bed of an unimproved river. A navigation always shares the drainage basin of the river. A vessel uses the calm parts of the river itself as well as improvements, traversing the same changes in height.
A true canal is a channel that cuts across a drainage divide, making a navigable channel connecting two different drainage basins.
Structures used in artificial waterways
Both navigations and canals use engineered structures to improve navigation:
* weirs and dams to raise river water levels to usable depths;
* looping descents to create a longer and gentler channel around a stretch of rapids or falls;
* locks to allow ships and barges to ascend/descend.
Since they cut across drainage divides, canals are more difficult to construct and often need additional improvements, like viaducts and aqueducts to bridge waters over streams and roads, and ways to keep water in the channel.
Additional Information
A canal is an artificial passage used for the conveyance of water from a river or from a reservoir to its intended destination for the intended use. Canals are also known as channel, which is derived from the French word “Chanel”.
A canal connects a river or a reservoir to the destination where the water is to be supplied. Water in the canal is conveyed for various purposes such as irrigation, power generation, etc.
Q: What does a baby computer calls its father?
A: Obsolete
* * *
Q: What do you get if you cross a computer with a ballet dancer?
A: The Netcracker suite.
* * *
Q: What does a king computer do?
A: Execute his programs!
* * *
Q: Why won' tpeople take their iPhones to the bathroom?
A: Because they don't want to give away their IP address!
* * *
Q: How do you get a computer drunk?
A: A Screenshot of Tequila.
* * *
Bromine water
Gist
Bromine water is a solution of bromine (Br₂) dissolved in water, typically appearing as a vivid yellow-to-red liquid. It's a strong oxidizing agent and is used to test for unsaturation in organic compounds, with the color of the solution changing when it reacts with unsaturated compounds.
Summary
Bromine water is an oxidizing, intense brown mixture containing diatomic bromine (Br2) dissolved in water (H2O). It is often used as a reactive in chemical assays of recognition for substances which react with bromine in an aqueous environment with the halogenation mechanism, mainly unsaturated carbon compounds (carbon compounds with 1 or more double or triple bond(s)). The most common compounds that react well with bromine water are phenols, alkenes, enols, the acetyl group, aniline, and glucose. In addition, bromine water is commonly used to test for the presence of an alkene which contains a double covalent bond, reacting with the bromine water, changing its color from an intense yellow to a colorless solution. Bromine water is also commonly used to check for the presence of an aldehyde group in compounds. In this reaction, the color of bromine water is changed to yellow from colorless (oxidation process).
Details
An aqueous solution containing bromine molecule is the bromine water.
Bromine water solution can be prepared by two ways-
* Shake a few (2 to 6) drops of bromine liquid with 50mL of water in a brown bottle. Addition of very small amounts of sodium bromide and sodium bromate will help in the test for unsaturation.
* Mix sodium bromide and sodium bromate salts in the ratio of about 10:1 and add dil.sulphuric acid slowly.
Bromine water has yellow to red colour depending on the bromine concentration.
Inhaling the vapours may cause lung problems. May cause eye irritation and severe skin burns when it comes in contact with. Having a 5% sodium thiosulphate for washing is advisable first aid for external bromine contact.
Bromine Water Test
Bromine water is an oxidizing agent and reacts with reducing compounds like glucose-containing aldehydes, and as brominating agents with aromatic compounds like phenols and amines. It is used primarily to test the unsaturation present in organic compounds.
Additional Information
About 3.41 grams (0.12 ounce) of bromine dissolve in 100 milliliters (0.1 quart) of water at room temperature. The solution is known as bromine water. Like chlorine water, it is a good oxidizing agent, and it is more useful because it does not decompose so readily.
Bromine water is used as a test for alkenes and alkanes. When an alkene is added to bromine water, a halogen, and shaken the double bond in the alkene reacts with the bromine. After being allowed to stand, the layers separate again. The bromine water has been decoloured by the reaction to form water (lower layer). The bromine has added to the alkene to form the corresponding bromoalkane (upper layer). An alkane has been added to bromine water and the test tube shaken. The alkane used here is hexane which, as a hydrocarbon, is immiscible with water. After shaking and being allowed to stand, the two layers separate again, but the bromine is now dissolved in the hexane (top layer) rather than the water (bottom layer). Alkanes do not decolorize bromine.
Biopsy
Gist
A biopsy is a medical procedure where a small sample of tissue is removed from the body for examination under a microscope. This sample is then analyzed by a pathologist to help diagnose or monitor various medical conditions.
A biopsy is the removal of tissue from any part of the body to examine it for disease. Some may remove a small tissue sample with a needle while others may surgically remove a suspicious nodule or lump. Most needle biopsies are performed on an outpatient basis with minimal preparation.
Summary
A biopsy is a medical test commonly performed by a surgeon, an interventional radiologist, or an interventional cardiologist. The process involves the extraction of sample cells or tissues for examination to determine the presence or extent of a disease. The tissue is then fixed, dehydrated, embedded, sectioned, stained and mounted before it is generally examined under a microscope by a pathologist; it may also be analyzed chemically. When an entire lump or suspicious area is removed, the procedure is called an excisional biopsy. An incisional biopsy or core biopsy samples a portion of the abnormal tissue without attempting to remove the entire lesion or tumor. When a sample of tissue or fluid is removed with a needle in such a way that cells are removed without preserving the histological architecture of the tissue cells, the procedure is called a needle aspiration biopsy. Biopsies are most commonly performed for insight into possible cancerous or inflammatory conditions.
Details
Overview
A biopsy is a procedure to remove cells, tissue or fluid for examination by a medical pathologist. Healthcare providers do biopsies when they identify areas of concern or if you have symptoms or signs of certain conditions. There are different types of biopsy procedures.
A biopsy removes samples of your tissue, cells or fluids so a medical pathologist can examine them for signs of disease.
Biopsies are one of the ways healthcare providers determine what’s going on in your body. Biopsy types include bone marrow biopsy, excisional biopsy, needle biopsy and sentinel node biopsy.
What is a biopsy?
A biopsy is one of the ways healthcare providers determine what’s going on in your body. In a biopsy, a provider removes samples of your tissue, cells or fluids so a medical pathologist can examine them for signs of disease. Providers may recommend biopsies to diagnose or monitor medical conditions or to plan treatment.
You may hear the term “biopsy” and think “cancer,” but providers do biopsies to diagnose many medical conditions, like:
* Inflammatory disorders, such as in your kidney (nephritis) or liver (hepatitis).
* Infections, like tuberculosis.
* Immune disorders, such as chronic pancreatitis.
* Peptic ulcer disease.
* Endometriosis.
Types of biopsies
All biopsies are procedures to obtain samples of tissue and fluid, but they’re done in different ways. Healthcare providers may do biopsies in medical offices or operating rooms. Biopsy types include:
* Bone marrow biopsy: Providers use a special biopsy needle and syringe to obtain a small sample of bone marrow. They do bone marrow biopsies to diagnose blood cancers, blood disorders and other diseases.
* Cone biopsy: Also known as conization or cold knife biopsy, providers do cone biopsies to remove abnormal tissue from your cervix. Cone biopsies may detect cervical cancer or cervical dysplasia that could lead to cancer.
* Excisional biopsy or incisional biopsies: In these procedures, providers make incisions or cuts in your body to remove tissue from inside your body. Excisional biopsies involve removing entire lumps or suspicious areas. Incisional biopsies involve taking tissue samples of lumps or suspicious areas.
* Liquid biopsy: This blood test detects signs of cancerous cells or cancer cell DNA.
* Needle biopsy: Providers use needle biopsies to extract cells, fluid or tissues. Your provider may order a needle biopsy if they feel an unusual lump or bump on your body or imaging tests detect potential issues.
* Punch biopsy: Providers use a special device to remove tissue that may be cancerous. Providers use a special device that punches a hole in your skin’s surface.
* Sentinel node biopsy: Providers do this procedure to see if cancer cells have spread from an original tumor.
* Shave biopsy: Providers use a razor to scrape up a small sample of skin cells to detect skin cancer.
Additional Information
A biopsy is a procedure done to remove tissue or cells from the body for examination under a microscope. Some biopsies can be done in a healthcare provider's office, while others need to be done in a hospital setting. In addition, some biopsies can be done with a local anesthetic to numb just the local area involved. Others may need sedation or even full anesthesia that puts you completely asleep during the procedure.
Biopsies are usually done to find out if a tumor is cancerous or to find the cause of an unexplained lesion, mole, infection, or inflammation.
How is a biopsy done?
A biopsy can be done in various ways. It depends on the type of specimen needed. Tissue samples are usually small and taken from tissue that appears changed in structure, such as a tumor.
Types of biopsies
* Endoscopic biopsy. This type of biopsy is done through a fiberoptic endoscope. This is a long, thin tube that has a close-focusing telescope on the end for viewing. The scope is passed through a natural body orifice (for example, rectum or mouth) or a small incision. It is used to look at the organ in question for abnormal or suspicious areas so that a small amount of tissue can be removed for study. Endoscopic procedures are named for the organ or body area to be viewed or treated. The healthcare provider can insert the endoscope into the gastrointestinal tract (alimentary tract endoscopy), bladder (cystoscopy), abdominal cavity (laparoscopy), joint cavity (arthroscopy), mid-portion of the chest (mediastinoscopy), or trachea and bronchial system (laryngoscopy and bronchoscopy).
* Bone marrow biopsy. Bone marrow aspiration or biopsy involves taking a small amount of bone marrow fluid (aspiration) and/or solid bone marrow tissue (called a core biopsy). The tissue is usually taken from the back of the hip bones to be examined for the number, size, and maturity of blood cells and/or abnormal cells.
* Excisional or incisional biopsy. This type of biopsy is often used when a wider or deeper portion of the tissue is needed. Using a scalpel (surgical knife), a full thickness of skin or all or part of a large tumor may be removed for further examination. The wound is sewn closed (with surgical thread).
When the entire tumor is removed, it is called an excisional biopsy. If only a portion of the tumor is removed, it is called an incisional biopsy. For instance, excisional biopsy is the method usually preferred when melanoma is suspected. Both types of biopsies can be done by using local or regional anesthesia. If the tumor is inside the chest or belly, general anesthesia is used. Under some circumstances, surgeons will take an excisional or incisional biopsy that goes immediately to the pathologist while the patient remains under anesthesia. This is to make sure of complete removal of a tumor. One example of this is during Mohs surgery on the face.
* Fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy. This type of biopsy involves using a thin needle and syringe to remove very small pieces from a tumor. Local anesthetic is sometimes used to numb the area. The test rarely causes much discomfort and leaves no scar.
FNA is not used for diagnosis of a suspicious mole. It may be used to biopsy large lymph nodes near a melanoma to see if the melanoma has spread. Breast and thyroid tumors are examples of tumors that may be studied through FNA. A computed tomography scan (CT or CAT scan) may be used to guide a needle into a tumor in an internal organ, such as the lung or liver. An ultrasound, fluoroscopy (a type of continuous X-ray) or other study may also be used for guidance of the needle. A core biopsy is similar to the FNA, but with a larger needle for a larger tissue sample.
* Punch biopsy. Punch biopsies involve taking a deeper sample of skin with a biopsy instrument that removes a short cylinder, or "apple core," of tissue. After a local anesthetic, the instrument is rotated on the surface of the skin until it cuts through all the layers. This includes the dermis, epidermis, and the most superficial parts of the subcutis (fat).
* Shave biopsy. This type of biopsy involves removing the top layers of skin by shaving it off. Shave biopsies are used to diagnose some basal cell or squamous cell skin cancers as well as other skin lesions, but they are not recommended for suspected melanomas of the skin. Shave biopsies are also done with a local anesthetic.
* Reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM). RCM is a technique that allows the healthcare provider to look at an abnormal area of skin to a certain depth without cutting into the skin or removing a skin sample. RCM is used widely in Europe, and it's now available in some centers in the U.S.
Common biopsy sites
* Bone marrow
* Brain
* Breast
* Gastrointestinal tract (stomach and intestines)
* Liver
* Lung
* Lymph nodes
* Skin
* Thyroid
After a biopsy, the tissue specimen is sent to the pathology lab to be examined and analyzed. The time needed to get results back varies depending on the type of tissue and the tests being done.
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#10375. What does the term in Physics Rechargeable battery mean?
#10376. What does the term in Physics Telemetry mean?
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#5563. What does the adjective opinionated mean?
#5564. What does the adjective oppressed mean?
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#2373. What does the medical term Lobe (anatomy) mean?
2320) Electron gun
Gist
An electron gun is a device that generates and directs a stream of electrons, also known as an electron beam, in a vacuum. It's essentially a source of electrons, often used to produce images (like on TV screens), analyze materials, or perform other scientific tasks.
An electron gun is the source of electrons in a cathode ray tube. An electron gun consists of a cathode emitter of electrons, an anode with an aperture through which the beam of electrons can pass, and one or more focusing and control electrodes.
Summary
An electron gun, electrode structure that produces and may control, focus, and deflect a beam of electrons, as in a television picture tube (see figure), where the beam produces a visual pattern on the tube’s screen. The source of the electron beam is the cathode, a flat metal support covered with oxides of barium and strontium. When heated by a coil behind the support, these oxides emit electrons, which are drawn toward a positively charged sleeve (first anode) that is contoured to allow the electron beam to flow within the inside diameter. The beam is then electrostatically constricted and collimated by a metal disk with a hole (the control electrode) before it is directed to strike a phosphor-coated screen.
Details
An electron gun (also called electron emitter) is an electrical component in some vacuum tubes that produces a narrow, collimated electron beam that has a precise kinetic energy.
The largest use is in cathode-ray tubes (CRTs), used in older television sets, computer displays and oscilloscopes, before the advent of flat-panel displays. Electron guns are also used in field-emission displays (FEDs), which are essentially flat-panel displays made out of rows of extremely small cathode-ray tubes. They are also used in microwave linear beam vacuum tubes such as klystrons, inductive output tubes, travelling-wave tubes, and gyrotrons, as well as in scientific instruments such as electron microscopes and particle accelerators.
Electron guns may be classified by the type of electric field generation (DC or RF), by emission mechanism (thermionic, photocathode, cold emission, plasmas source), by focusing (pure electrostatic or with magnetic fields), or by the number of electrodes.
Design
A direct current, electrostatic thermionic electron gun is formed from several parts: a hot cathode, which is heated to create a stream of electrons via thermionic emission; electrodes generating an electric field to focus the electron beam (such as a Wehnelt cylinder); and one or more anode electrodes which accelerate and further focus the beam. A large voltage difference between the cathode and anode accelerates the electrons away from the cathode. A repulsive ring placed between the electrodes focuses the electrons onto a small spot on the anode, at the expense of a lower extraction field strength on the cathode surface. There is often a hole through the anode at this small spot, through which the electrons pass to form a collimated beam before reaching a second anode, called the collector. This arrangement is similar to an Einzel lens.
An RF electron gun consists of a Microwave cavity, either single cell or multi-cell, and a cathode. In order to obtain a smaller beam emittance at a given beam current, a photocathode is used. An RF electron gun with a photocathode is called a photoinjector.
Photoinjectors play a leading role in X-ray Free-electron lasers and small beam emittance accelerator physics facilities.
Applications
The most common use of electron guns is in cathode-ray tubes, which were widely used in computer and television monitors before the advent of flat screen displays. Most color cathode-ray tubes incorporate three electron guns, each one producing a different stream of electrons. Each stream travels through a shadow mask where the electrons will impinge upon either a red, green or blue phosphor to light up a color pixel on the screen. The resultant color that is seen by the viewer will be a combination of these three primary colors.
An electron gun can also be used to ionize particles by adding electrons to, or removing electrons from an atom. This technology is sometimes used in mass spectrometry in a process called electron ionization to ionize vaporized or gaseous particles. More powerful electron guns are used for welding, metal coating, 3D metal printers, metal powder production and vacuum furnaces.
Electron guns are also used in medical applications to produce X-rays using a linac (linear accelerator); a high energy electron beam hits a target, stimulating emission of X-rays.
Electron guns are also used in travelling-wave tube amplifiers for microwave frequencies.
Additional Information
Definition: Electron gun is defined as the source of focused and accelerated electron beam. It is a device used in Cathode Ray Tube for displaying the image on the phosphorous screen of CRT. The electron gun emits electrons and forms them into a beam by the help of a heater, cathode, grid, pre-accelerating, accelerating and focusing anode.
Emission of Electrons
The electrons are emitted through the indirectly heated cathode. Indirectly heated cathode means the cathode electrode are surrounded by the filament, and the electrodes emit electrons when the power apply across it.
For getting the high emission of electrons at the moderate temperature, the layer of barium and strontium oxide is applied at the end of the cathode. The current and voltage required by the indirectly heated cathode are approximately equal to the 600 mA and 6.3V.
Working of Electron Gun
After exiting from the cathode, the electron passes through the control grid. The control grid is made up of nickel material. It is centrally hole and co-axial with the CRT axis. The intensity of the control beams depends on the number of electrons emitted from the cathode. The grid has negative biasing which controls the flow of electrons.
The electron which passes from the control grid is accelerated by the high positive potential which is applied across the pre-accelerating and accelerating grids. The electron beam is focused by the focusing anode. The beam after passing through the focusing anode passing through the deflection plates and goes to the fluorescent screen.
Construction of Electron Gun
The main function of the electron gun is to produce and accelerate the beam of an electron inside the vacuum tube of the CRT. For generating and accelerating the gun requires the heater, cathode electrodes, grid, and different types of anodes.
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