1,790 research outputs found
Inexpensive, stable circuit measures heart rate
Inexpensive transistorized circuit provides reliable analog indications of heart rate in response to preamplified electrocardiograph signal applied to its input
Blood pressure measuring system for separating and separately recording dc signal and an ac signal Patent
Blood pressure measuring system for separately recording dc and ac pressure signals of Korotkoff sound
Biomedical recording system
System collects medical data directly from patients and permanently records and displays several parameters - electrocardiograph, electroencephalograph, heart rate, respiration rate, auscultatory blood pressure, leg circumference changes, body temperature, and time. Components and operation of the system are described
New fabrication technique for highly sensitive qPlus sensor with well-defined spring constant
A new technique for the fabrication of highly sensitive qPlus sensor for
atomic force microscopy (AFM) is described. Focused ion beam was used to cut
then weld onto a bare quartz tuning fork a sharp micro-tip from an
electrochemically etched tungsten wire. The resulting qPlus sensor exhibits
high resonance frequency and quality factor allowing increased force gradient
sensitivity. Its spring constant can be determined precisely which allows
accurate quantitative AFM measurements. The sensor is shown to be very stable
and could undergo usual UHV tip cleaning including e-beam and field evaporation
as well as in-situ STM tip treatment. Preliminary results with STM and AFM
atomic resolution imaging at of the silicon
surface are presented.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Swelling of acetylated wood in organic liquids
To investigate the affinity of acetylated wood for organic liquids, Yezo
spruce wood specimens were acetylated with acetic anhydride, and their swelling
in various liquids were compared to those of untreated specimens. The
acetylated wood was rapidly and remarkably swollen in aprotic organic liquids
such as benzene and toluene in which the untreated wood was swollen only
slightly and/or very slowly. On the other hand, the swelling of wood in water,
ethylene glycol and alcohols remained unchanged or decreased by the
acetylation. Consequently the maximum volume of wood swollen in organic liquids
was always larger than that in water. The effect of acetylation on the maximum
swollen volume of wood was greater in liquids having smaller solubility
parameters. The easier penetration of aprotic organic liquids into the
acetylated wood was considered to be due to the scission of hydrogen bonds
among the amorphous wood constituents by the substitution of hydroxyl groups
with hydrophobic acetyl groups.Comment: to be published in J Wood Science (Japanese wood research society
Observation of Magnetic Supercooling of the Transition to the Vortex State
We demonstrate that the transition from the high-field state to the vortex
state in a nanomagnetic disk shows the magnetic equivalent of supercooling.
This is evidence that this magnetic transition can be described in terms of a
modified Landau first-order phase transition. To accomplish this we have
measured the bulk magnetization of single magnetic disks using nanomechanical
torsional resonator torque magnetometry. This allows observation of single
vortex creation events without averaging over an array of disks or over
multiple runs.Comment: 11 pages preprint, 4 figures, accepted to New Journal of Physic
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