9,982 research outputs found
Visual examination apparatus
An automated visual examination apparatus for measuring visual sensitivity and mapping blind spot location including a projection system for displaying to a patient a series of visual stimuli. A response switch enables him to indicate his reaction to the stimuli, and a recording system responsive to both the visual stimuli per se and the patient's response. The recording system thereby provides a correlated permanent record of both stimuli and response from which a substantive and readily apparent visual evaluation can be made
Visual sensitivity tester
Testing device uses closed loop film cassettes to project programmed visual stimuli on screen which the observer views through a lens making the stimuli appear to be at optical infinity. Tester is useful for determining changes in glautomatous visual field sensitivity
Visual examination apparatus
An automated visual examination apparatus for measuring visual sensitivity and mapping blind spot location is described. The apparatus includes a projection system for displaying to a patient a series of visual stimuli, a response switch enabling him to indicate his reaction to the stimuli, and a recording system responsive to both the visual stimuli per se and the patient's response. The recording system provides a correlated permanent record of both stimuli and response from which a substantive and readily apparent visual evaluation can be made
Bonding with Self-etching Primers – Pumice or Pre-etch? An \u3cem\u3ein vitro\u3c/em\u3e Study
The purpose of this study was to compare the shear bond strengths (SBSs) of orthodontic brackets bonded with self-etching primer (SEP) using different enamel surface preparations. A two-by-two factorial study design was used. Sixty human premolars were harvested, cleaned, and randomly assigned to four groups (n = 15 per group). Teeth were bathed in saliva for 48 hours to form a pellicle. Treatments were assigned as follows: group 1 was pumiced for 10 seconds and pre-etched for 5 seconds with 37 per cent phosphoric acid before bonding with SEP (Transbond Plus). Group 2 was pumiced for 10 seconds before bonding. Group 3 was pre-etched for 5 seconds before bonding. Group 4 had no mechanical or chemical preparation before bonding. All teeth were stored in distilled water for 24 hours at 37°C before debonding. The SBS values and adhesive remnant index (ARI) score were recorded. The SBS values (±1 SD) for groups 1–4 were 22.9 ± 6.6, 16.1 ± 7.3, 36.2 ± 8.2, and 13.1 ± 10.1 MPa, respectively. Two-way analysis of variance and subsequent contrasts showed statistically significant differences among treatment groups. ARI scores indicated the majority of adhesive remained on the bracket for all four groups. Pre-etching the bonding surface for 5 seconds with 37 per cent phosphoric acid, instead of pumicing, when using SEPs to bond orthodontic brackets, resulted in greater SBSs
Bonding with Self-etching Primers – Pumice or Pre-etch? An \u3cem\u3ein vitro\u3c/em\u3e Study
The purpose of this study was to compare the shear bond strengths (SBSs) of orthodontic brackets bonded with self-etching primer (SEP) using different enamel surface preparations. A two-by-two factorial study design was used. Sixty human premolars were harvested, cleaned, and randomly assigned to four groups (n = 15 per group). Teeth were bathed in saliva for 48 hours to form a pellicle. Treatments were assigned as follows: group 1 was pumiced for 10 seconds and pre-etched for 5 seconds with 37 per cent phosphoric acid before bonding with SEP (Transbond Plus). Group 2 was pumiced for 10 seconds before bonding. Group 3 was pre-etched for 5 seconds before bonding. Group 4 had no mechanical or chemical preparation before bonding. All teeth were stored in distilled water for 24 hours at 37°C before debonding. The SBS values and adhesive remnant index (ARI) score were recorded. The SBS values (±1 SD) for groups 1–4 were 22.9 ± 6.6, 16.1 ± 7.3, 36.2 ± 8.2, and 13.1 ± 10.1 MPa, respectively. Two-way analysis of variance and subsequent contrasts showed statistically significant differences among treatment groups. ARI scores indicated the majority of adhesive remained on the bracket for all four groups. Pre-etching the bonding surface for 5 seconds with 37 per cent phosphoric acid, instead of pumicing, when using SEPs to bond orthodontic brackets, resulted in greater SBSs
Ferromagnetism in substituted zinc oxide
Room-temperature ferromagnetism is observed in (110) oriented ZnO films
containing 5 at % of Sc, Ti, V, Fe, Co or Ni, but not Cr, Mn or Cu ions. There
are large moments, 1.9 and 0.5 muB/atom for Co- and Ti-substituted oxides,
respectively. Sc-substituted ZnO shows also a moment of 0.3 muB/Sc.
Magnetization is very anisotropic, with variations of up to a factor three
depending on the orientation of the applied field relative to the R-cut
sapphire substrates. Results are interpreted in terms of a spin-split donor
impurity band model, which can account for ferromagnetism in insulating or
conducting high-k oxides with concentrations of magnetic ions that lie far
below the percolation threshold. The variation of the ferromagnetism with
oxygen pressure used during film growth is evidence of a link between
ferromagnetism and defect concentration.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Insights into the room temperature magnetism of ZnO/Co3O4 mixtures
The origin of room temperature (RT) ferromagneticlike behavior in ZnO-based
diluted magnetic semiconductors is still an unclear topic. The present work
concentrates on the appearance of RT magnetic moments in just mixed ZnO/Co3O4
mixtures without thermal treatment. In this study, it is shown that the
magnetism seems to be related to surface reduction of the Co3O4 nanoparticles,
in which, an antiferromagnetic Co3O4 nanoparticle (core) is surrounded by a
CoO-like shell. This singular superficial magnetism has also been found in
other mixtures with semiconductors such as TiO2 and insulators such as Al2O3
Speckle Statistics in Adaptively Corrected Images
(abridged) Imaging observations are generally affected by a fluctuating
background of speckles, a particular problem when detecting faint stellar
companions at small angular separations. Knowing the distribution of the
speckle intensities at a given location in the image plane is important for
understanding the noise limits of companion detection. The speckle noise limit
in a long-exposure image is characterized by the intensity variance and the
speckle lifetime. In this paper we address the former quantity through the
distribution function of speckle intensity. Previous theoretical work has
predicted a form for this distribution function at a single location in the
image plane. We developed a fast readout mode to take short exposures of
stellar images corrected by adaptive optics at the ground-based UCO/Lick
Observatory, with integration times of 5 ms and a time between successive
frames of 14.5 ms ( m). These observations temporally
oversample and spatially Nyquist sample the observed speckle patterns. We show,
for various locations in the image plane, the observed distribution of speckle
intensities is consistent with the predicted form. Additionally, we demonstrate
a method by which and can be mapped over the image plane. As the
quantity is proportional to the PSF of the telescope free of random
atmospheric aberrations, this method can be used for PSF calibration and
reconstruction.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepte
Wind tunnel test of the 0.010-scale space shuttle integrated vehicle in the NASA-Ames 3.5 foot hypersonic wind tunnel (IA10)
Experimental aerodynamic investigations were conducted in the NASA Ames Research Center 3.5-Foot Hypersonic Wind Tunnel on a 0.010-scale model of the space shuttle vehicle orbiter and external tank (model no. 32 0T). The purpose of the test was to evaluate the basic hypersonic stability characteristics of the external tank and orbiter and to define orbiter plume effects on aero characteristics using solid plumes. The test was conducted at angles of attack from minus 10 deg to 30 deg and angles of sideslip of minus 10 deg thru 10 deg. Six component force data and static base pressures were recorded during the test
Finite resolution measurement of the non-classical polarization statistics of entangled photon pairs
By limiting the resolution of quantum measurements, the measurement induced
changes of the quantum state can be reduced, permitting subsequent measurements
of variables that do not commute with the initially measured property. It is
then possible to experimentally determine correlations between non-commuting
variables. The application of this method to the polarization statistics of
entangled photon pairs reveals that negative conditional probabilities between
non-orthogonal polarization components are responsible for the violation of
Bell's inequalities. Such negative probabilities can also be observed in finite
resolution measurements of the polarization of a single photon. The violation
of Bell's inequalities therefore originates from local properties of the
quantum statistics of single photon polarization.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures and 1 table, new figure to illustrate results,
improved explanation of statistical analysi
- …