69,328 research outputs found

    Miniaturization of flight deflection measurement system

    Get PDF
    A flight deflection measurement system is disclosed including a hybrid microchip of a receiver/decoder. The hybrid microchip decoder is mounted piggy back on the miniaturized receiver and forms an integral unit therewith. The flight deflection measurement system employing the miniaturized receiver/decoder can be used in a wind tunnel. In particular, the miniaturized receiver/decoder can be employed in a spin measurement system due to its small size and can retain already established control surface actuation functions

    Post-operative cranial pressure monitoring system

    Get PDF
    System for monitoring of fluidic pressures in cranial cavity uses a miniaturized pressure sensing transducer, combined with suitable amplification means, a meter with scale calibrated in terms of pressures between minus 100 and plus 900 millimeters of water, and a miniaturized chart recorder covering similar range of pressures

    Short range miniaturized biotelemetry system

    Get PDF
    A biotelemetry system for measuring and transmitting EKG, EMG, and EEG data by an RF link to a receiver was designed, developed, and delivered. The system is battery operated with the batteries and transmitting electronics an integral part of the electrode sensors. The low frequency response of 0.05 Hz assures faithful reproduction of detailed EKG and all measurements are made by the utilization of two electrode sensors

    Ultrasonic scanning system for in-place inspection of brazed tube joints

    Get PDF
    A miniaturized ultrasonic scanning system for nondestructive in-place, non-immersion testing of brazed joints in stainless-steel tubing is described. The system is capable of scanning brazed tube joints, with limited clearance access, in 1/4 through 5/8 inch union, tee, elbow and cross configurations. The system has the capability to detect defective conditions now associated with material density changes in addition to those which are depended upon density variations. The system includes a miniaturized scanning head assembly that fits around a tube joint and rotates the transducer around and down the joint in a continuous spiral motion. The C-scan recorder is similar in principle to conventional models except that it was specially designed to track the continuous spiral scan of the tube joint. The scanner and recorder can be operated with most commercially available ultrasonic flaw detectors

    Miniaturized pointing mount performance analysis

    Get PDF
    Analytical analysis and computer simulation results of the miniaturized pointing mount as an instrument pointing system are presented. Miniaturized mount performance results include inertial pointing, slewing, tracking, and rastering. Typical instrument characteristics are used as well as some parameter variations of instrument and miniaturized pointing mount characteristics

    Miniature Fourier Ptychography Microscope using Raspberry Pi Camera and Hardware

    Get PDF
    We report a Fourier ptychography setup using a raspberry pi camera sensor and its lens in reversed configuration. In this work data acquisition was performed by means of a raspberry pi board which eliminates the requirement of a computer for data acquisition thus allowing a miniaturized system for remote data acquisition costing around £100

    An ultra-fast digital diffuse optical spectroscopic imaging system for neoadjuvant chemotherapy monitoring

    Full text link
    Up to 20% of breast cancer patients who undergo presurgical (neoadjuvant) chemotherapy have no response to treatment. Standard-of-care imaging modalities, including MRI, CT, mammography, and ultrasound, measure anatomical features and tumor size that reveal response only after months of treatment. Recently, non-invasive, near-infrared optical markers have shown promise in indicating the efficacy of treatment at the outset of the chemotherapy treatment. For example, frequency domain Diffuse Optical Spectroscopic Imaging (DOSI) can be used to characterize the optical scattering and absorption properties of thick tissue, including breast tumors. These parameters can then be used to calculate tissue concentrations of chromophores, including oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, water, and lipids. Tumors differ in hemoglobin concentration, as compared with healthy background tissue, and changes in hemoglobin concentration during neoadjuvant chemotherapy have been shown to correlate with efficacy of treatment. Using DOSI early in treatment to measure chromophore concentrations may be a powerful tool for guiding neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatment. Previous frequency-domain DOSI systems have been limited by large device footprints, complex electronics, high costs, and slow acquisition speeds, all of which complicate access to patients in the clinical setting. In this work a new digital DOSI (dDOSI) system has been developed, which is relatively inexpensive and compact, allowing for use at the bedside, while providing unprecedented measurement speeds. The system builds on, and significantly advances, previous dDOSI setups developed by our group and, for the first time, utilizes hardware-integrated custom board-level direct digital synthesizers (DDS) and analog to digital converters (ADC) to generate and directly measure signals utilizing undersampling techniques. The dDOSI system takes high-speed optical measurements by utilizing wavelength multiplexing while sweeping through hundreds of modulation frequencies in tens of milliseconds. The new dDOSI system is fast, inexpensive, and compact without compromising accuracy and precision

    Selective low concentration ammonia sensing in a microfluidic lab-on-a-chip

    Get PDF
    In the medical community, there is a considerable interest in a diagnostic breath analyzer for ammonia that is selectively enough to measure in exhaled air and small enough for the small volumes available in such an application. An indirect measurement system for low gaseous ammonia concentrations has been miniaturized and integrated on a chip in order to reach this goal. The detection limit of the system was calculated to be 1.1 parts per billion (ppb). The response time was determined to be 1.6 min with a gas How of 50 ml/min. The required gas volume for one measurement is therefore sufficiently small, although sampling assistance is required for breath analysis. The selectivity of the system is sufficient to measure ammonia concentrations in the low-ppb range. The system is even sufficiently selective to be used in environments that contain elevated carbon dioxide levels, like exhaled air. The lower ammonia concentration expected in diagnostic breath analysis applications, 50 ppb, was demonstrated to be detectable
    corecore