'Meter' p7 Searchterm 'Meter' found in 54 articles 2 terms [ • ] - 52 definitions [• ] Result Pages : •
(I) The intensity of a wave is the rate of power through a unit region perpendicular to the direction of propagation. The unit of intensity is watts per square meter (W/cm2).
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(J) The SI unit of work or energy. Definition: The work done by a force of 1 Newton acting to move an object through a distance of 1 meter in the direction in which the force is applied. Since kinetic energy is one half the mass times the square of the velocity, 1 joule is the kinetic energy of a mass of two kilograms moving at a velocity of 1 m/sec. The joule is named for the British physicist James P. Joule. •
Linear array transducer elements are rectangular and arranged in a line. Linear array probes are described by the radius of width in mm. A linear array transducer can have up to 512 elements spaced over 75-120 mm. The beam produced by such a narrow element will diverge rapidly after the wave travels only a few millimeters. The smaller the face of the transducer, the more divergent is the beam. This would result in poor lateral resolution due to beam divergence and low sensitivity due to the small element size. In order to overcome this, adjacent elements are pulsed simultaneously (typically 8 to 16; or more in wide-aperture designs). In a subgroup of x elements, the inner elements pulse delayed with respect to the outer elements. The interference of the x small divergent wavelets produces a focused beam. The delay time determines the depth of focus for the transmitted beam and can be changed during scanning. Linear arrays are usually cheaper than sector scanners but have greater skin contact and therefore make it difficult to reach organs between ribs such as the heart. One-dimensional linear array transducers may have dynamic, electronic focusing providing a narrow ultrasound beam in the image plane. In the z-plane (elevation plane - perpendicular to the image plane) focusing may be provided by an acoustic lens with a fixed focal zone. Rectangular or matrix transducers with unequal rows of transducer elements are two-dimensional (2D), but they are termed 1.5D, because the number of rows is much less than the number of columns. These transducers provide dynamic, electronic focusing even in the z-plane. See also Rectangular Array Transducer. •
From Mallinckrodt Inc MP1950 is an experimental thin lipid-shelled ultrasound contrast agent with a decafluorobutane gas core. MP1950 has a monolayer lipid microbubble shell with a thickness in the order of a few nanometers. •
Microbubbles filled with air or inert gases are used as contrast agents in ultrasound imaging. Compression and rarefaction created by an ultrasound wave insonating a gas-filled microbubble along with the mechanical index of the ultrasonic beam lead to volume pulsations of the bubbles, and it is this change that results in the signal enhancement. Microbubbles have diameters from 1 μm to 10 μm and a thin flexible or rigid shell composed of albumin, lipid, or polymer confining a gas such as nitrogen, or a perfluorocarbon. These microbubbles can cross the pulmonary capillaries and have a serum half-life of a few minutes. Microbubbles in the 1-10 μm range have their resonance at the frequencies used in diagnostic ultrasound (1−15MHz). Smaller bubbles resonate at higher frequencies. Caused by this coincidence, they are such effective reflectors. The intrinsic compressibility of microbubbles is approximately 17,000 times more than water, and they are very strong scatterers of ultrasound. Under acoustic pressure the vibrating bubble radius may have a conventional linear response or a harmonic non-linear response. Microbubbles usually increase the Doppler signal amplitude by up to 30 dB. Further Reading: Basics:
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