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Extreme Sensitivity in Photoacoustics by Using Optical Cantilever
Extreme Sensitivity in Photoacoustics by Using Optical Cantilever

Evidence from the Absorption and Emission Spectra
Evidence from the Absorption and Emission Spectra

Vacuum-ultraviolet to infrared supercontinuum in hydrogen
Vacuum-ultraviolet to infrared supercontinuum in hydrogen

M.Sc. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
M.Sc. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY

... radiolysis of water – definition of G – value – mode of reactions of hydrated electrons.radiationdosimetry. Radio isotopes: Co-precipitation, ion-exchange, solvent extraction - as a tracer, Synthesis of labelled compounds (any two), isotopic dilution and radiopharmaceuticals.Neutron activation analy ...
Performance of fourier domain vs. time domain optical coherence
Performance of fourier domain vs. time domain optical coherence

... system was able to reveal anatomic structures and their dynamics on the ocular fundus4. This paper is devoted to a detailed discussion of noise sources in FDOCT systems in direct comparison to TDOCT. In FDOCT setups optical energy is measured rather than optical power. This is due to the fact that ...
Imaging with Terahertz Pulses
Imaging with Terahertz Pulses

Molecular-Fluorescence Enhancement via Blue
Molecular-Fluorescence Enhancement via Blue

Characterization of Thin Films (2)
Characterization of Thin Films (2)

... Characterizing Optical Thin Films (II) This is a follow up article to the first article [1] in which we developed the mathematical tools to determine the optical properties of optical thin film materials from the measured spectral data for a single layer coating. In the previous article we also demo ...
Title Magnetic Properties of Several Iron Compounds Studied by the
Title Magnetic Properties of Several Iron Compounds Studied by the

... tool for every kind of research of iron compounds or alloys. For more than ten years, the authors (T. T. and M. K.) have studied the chemistry of ferrous and ferric solutions and succeeded to clarify the preparation condition of various iron compounds which were produced as precipitates from the sol ...
Microstructure and humidity sensitive properties of MgFe2O4 ferrite
Microstructure and humidity sensitive properties of MgFe2O4 ferrite

... the conductivity increases or decreases according to wheather the oxides are of n-type or p-type. This means that electrons are apparently transfered from water molecules to oxides. The ability of a metal oxide to sense the presence of water molecules depends on the interaction between water molecul ...
Course Information Course title Materials Applications and Analyses
Course Information Course title Materials Applications and Analyses

... secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS), AFM, atomic absorption spectrometry, optical emission spectrometry, fourier transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR), Raman spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), ...
Digital Fourier Microscopy for Soft Matter Dynamics
Digital Fourier Microscopy for Soft Matter Dynamics

... image intensity is de facto a coherent hologram of the sample, with the real part of the scattered field encoded in the image intensity. As a consequence, the Fourier power spectrum of the near field images provides directly the scattering intensity I(Q) as a function of the scattering wave-vector Q ...
What is absolutely continuous spectrum?
What is absolutely continuous spectrum?

... question we address here concerns the characterization of spectral types (e.g.– pure point, singular continuous, absolutely continuous). Although these spectral types are completely determined by the boundary values of the resolvent, their dynamical characterizations in terms of the physical propert ...
2 Modeling and Design of Lens Systems
2 Modeling and Design of Lens Systems

View PDF - Oriental Journal of Chemistry
View PDF - Oriental Journal of Chemistry

Total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy
Total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy and microscopy

MAMMOGRAPHIC DETECTORS
MAMMOGRAPHIC DETECTORS

... An Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) electrode (labeled A) is uniformly deposited on the photoconducting layer usually with thermal evaporation. This electrode is called the ‘top electrode’. The top electrode is positively biased with a high voltage to create an electric field in the photoconductor’s bulk that ...
Single-shot Detection of Wavepacket Evolution
Single-shot Detection of Wavepacket Evolution

... The imaging detector can be used in a wide variety of pump-probe experiments. Two applications which demonstrate the high and low resolution extremes are presented here. First, we have used the imaging detector to resolve the fast phase evolution of a Rydberg wavepacket probed using bound-state inte ...
SPIE2005 5754-12-b
SPIE2005 5754-12-b

Raman spectroscopy: Watching a molecule breathe
Raman spectroscopy: Watching a molecule breathe

VI. ELECTRONIC SPECTROSCOPY The visible (V) and ultraviolet
VI. ELECTRONIC SPECTROSCOPY The visible (V) and ultraviolet

... 1801 (Thomas Young): discovery of optical interference (“Whenever two portions of the same light arrive to the eye by different routes, either exactly or very nearly in the same direction, the light becomes most intense when the difference of the two routes is any multiple of a certain length, and l ...
Laser Medicine and Medical Imaging – J. G. Fujimoto
Laser Medicine and Medical Imaging – J. G. Fujimoto

... (right) shows an in vivo image of cheek pouch which shows the epithelium, connective tissue and muscle layers at ultrahigh resolution. The cheek pouch was index matched by using a microscope cover glass and saline solution. ...
Preface The history of science is, to a considerable degree, the
Preface The history of science is, to a considerable degree, the

Cathodoluminescence in the scanning transmission electron
Cathodoluminescence in the scanning transmission electron

Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy
Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy

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Chemical imaging

Chemical imaging (as quantitative – chemical mapping) is the analytical capability to create a visual image of components distribution from simultaneous measurement of spectra and spatial, time information.The main idea - for chemical imaging, the analyst may choose to take as many data spectrum measured at a particular chemical component in spatial location at time; this is useful for chemical identification and quantification. Alternatively, selecting an image plane at a particular data spectrum (PCA - multivariable data of wavelength, spatial location at time) can map the spatial distribution of sample components, provided that their spectral signatures are different at the selected data spectrum.Software for chemical imaging is most specific and distinguished from chemical methods such as chemometrics. Hyperspectral imaging is most often applied to either solid or gel samples, and has applications in chemistry, biology, medicine, pharmacy (see also for example: food science, biotechnology, agriculture and industry. NIR, IR and Raman chemical imaging is also referred to as hyperspectral, spectroscopic, spectral or multispectral imaging (also see microspectroscopy). However, other ultra-sensitive and selective imaging techniques are also in use that involve either UV-visible or fluorescence microspectroscopy. Many imaging techniques can be used to analyze samples of all sizes, from the single molecule to the cellular level in biology and medicine, and to images of planetary systems in astronomy, but different instrumentation is employed for making observations on such widely different systems.Imaging instrumentation has three components: a radiation source to illuminate the sample, a spectrally selective element, and usually a detector array (the camera) to collect the images. When many stacked spectral channels (wavelengths) are collected for different locations of the microspectrometer focus on a line or planar array in the focal plane, the data is called hyperspectral; fewer wavelength data sets are called multispectral. The data format is called a hypercube. The data set may be visualized as a data cube, a three-dimensional block of data spanning two spatial dimensions (x and y), with a series of wavelengths (lambda) making up the third (spectral) axis. The hypercube can be visually and mathematically treated as a series of spectrally resolved images (each image plane corresponding to the image at one wavelength) or a series of spatially resolved spectra. Many materials, both manufactured and naturally occurring, derive their functionality from the spatial distribution of sample components. For example, extended release pharmaceutical formulations can be achieved by using a coating that acts as a barrier layer. The release of active ingredient is controlled by the presence of this barrier, and imperfections in the coating, such as discontinuities, may result in altered performance. In the semi-conductor industry, irregularities or contaminants in silicon wafers or printed micro-circuits can lead to failure of these components. The functionality of biological systems is also dependent upon chemical gradients – a single cell, tissue, and even whole organs function because of the very specific arrangement of components. It has been shown that even small changes in chemical composition and distribution may be an early indicator of disease. Any material that depends on chemical gradients for functionality may be amenable to study by an analytical technique that couples spatial and chemical characterization. To efficiently and effectively design and manufacture such materials, the ‘what’ and the ‘where’ must both be measured. The demand for this type of analysis is increasing as manufactured materials become more complex. Chemical imaging techniques is critical to understanding modern manufactured products and in some cases is a non-destructive technique so that samples are preserved for further testing.
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