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Result : Searchterm 'Kelvin' found in 1 term [] and 5 definitions []
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(K) The SI unit of temperature.
Definition: One Kelvin is 1/273.16 of the difference between the triple point of water (at exactly 273.16 K) and absolute zero.
The triple point of water is the temperature at which water can exist simultaneously in the gaseous, liquid, and solid states. Absolute zero is the temperature at which all molecular motion discontinues.
0 K is according to -273,15° Celsius and -459° Fahrenheit. | | | | | • Share the entry 'Kelvin': | | | | |
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The lowest possible temperature that can be obtained, at which all molecular motion discontinues. The unit is written as 0 K or 0 Kelvin, named after William Thomson, who developed the scale and became Lord Kelvin in 1892.
The analogous temperature in other units is:
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Magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI) is based on the magnetic resonance phenomenon, and is used for medical diagnostic imaging since ca. 1977 (see also MRI History).
The first developed MRI devices were constructed as long narrow tunnels. In the meantime the magnets became shorter and wider. In addition to this short bore magnet design, open MRI machines were created. MRI machines with open design have commonly either horizontal or vertical opposite installed magnets and obtain more space and air around the patient during the MRI test.
The basic hardware components of all MRI systems are the magnet, producing a stable and very intense magnetic field, the gradient coils, creating a variable field and radio frequency (RF) coils which are used to transmit energy and to encode spatial positioning. A computer controls the MRI scanning operation and processes the information.
The range of used field strengths for medical imaging is from 0.15 to 3 T. The open MRI magnets have usually field strength in the range 0.2 Tesla to 0.35 Tesla. The higher field MRI devices are commonly solenoid with short bore superconducting magnets, which provide homogeneous fields of high stability.
There are this different types of magnets:
The majority of superconductive magnets are based on niobium-titanium (NbTi) alloys, which are very reliable and require extremely uniform fields and extreme stability over time, but require a liquid helium cryogenic system to keep the conductors at approximately 4.2 Kelvin (-268.8° Celsius). To maintain this temperature the magnet is enclosed and cooled by a cryogen containing liquid helium (sometimes also nitrogen).
The gradient coils are required to produce a linear variation in field along one direction, and to have high efficiency, low inductance and low resistance, in order to minimize the current requirements and heat deposition. A Maxwell coil usually produces linear variation in field along the z-axis; in the other two axes it is best done using a saddle coil, such as the Golay coil.
The radio frequency coils used to excite the nuclei fall into two main categories; surface coils and volume coils.
The essential element for spatial encoding, the gradient coil sub-system of the MRI scanner is responsible for the encoding of specialized contrast such as flow information, diffusion information, and modulation of magnetization for spatial tagging.
An analog to digital converter turns the nuclear magnetic resonance signal to a digital signal. The digital signal is then sent to an image processor for Fourier transformation and the image of the MRI scan is displayed on a monitor.
For Ultrasound Imaging (USI) see Ultrasound Machine at Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.com.
See also the related poll results: ' In 2010 your scanner will probably work with a field strength of' and ' Most outages of your scanning system are caused by failure of' | | | | | | | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Device' (141).
| | | • View the NEWS results for 'Device' (29).
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small-steps-can-yield-big-energy-savings-and-cut-emissions-mris Thursday, 27 April 2023 by www.itnonline.com | | |
Portable MRI can detect brain abnormalities at bedside Tuesday, 8 September 2020 by news.yale.edu | | |
Point-of-Care MRI Secures FDA 510(k) Clearance Thursday, 30 April 2020 by www.diagnosticimaging.com | | |
World's First Portable MRI Cleared by FDA Monday, 17 February 2020 by www.medgadget.com | | |
Low Power MRI Helps Image Lungs, Brings Costs Down Thursday, 10 October 2019 by www.medgadget.com | | |
Cheap, portable scanners could transform brain imaging. But how will scientists deliver the data? Tuesday, 16 April 2019 by www.sciencemag.org | | |
The world's strongest MRI machines are pushing human imaging to new limits Wednesday, 31 October 2018 by www.nature.com | | |
Kyoto University and Canon reduce cost of MRI scanner to one tenth Monday, 11 January 2016 by www.electronicsweekly.com | | |
A transportable MRI machine to speed up the diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients Wednesday, 22 April 2015 by medicalxpress.com | | |
Portable 'battlefield MRI' comes out of the lab Thursday, 30 April 2015 by physicsworld.com | | |
Chemists develop MRI technique for peeking inside battery-like devices Friday, 1 August 2014 by www.eurekalert.org | | |
New devices doubles down to detect and map brain signals Monday, 23 July 2012 by scienceblog.com |
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The element helium (He) was discovered 1868 when P.J.C. Janssen and N. Lockyer detected a new line in the solar spectrum during the solar eclipse. Lockyer and E. Frankland suggested the name helium (Gr. Helios, the sun) for the new element. In 1895, helium was discovered in the uranium mineral cleveite and in 1907 it was found out that alpha particles are helium nuclei.
Properties: Helium belongs to the noble gases, is colorless, odorless, and occurs in two naturally isotopes, helium 3 and helium 4. As an inert gas, helium does not react chemically largely and don't burns. Helium 4 makes up over 99% of naturally occurring helium atoms. Helium is extracted from natural gas e.g. present in various radioactive minerals as a decay product. Deposits and sources are in the USA, Poland, the USSR, and a few in India. The rare deposits and increased consumption lead to a shortage of this gas.
K. Onnes worked for many years to liquefy helium, which persisted as a gas to the lowest temperature. Helium does not freeze at atmospheric pressure.
The density of helium vapor at his boiling point of 4.2 Kelvin is very high, with the vapor expanding greatly when heated to room temperature.
Nb, Tc, Pb, La, V, and Ta are superconductors at liquid helium temperature. Liquid helium is commonly used as a cryogen for superconducting magnets. A rapid evaporation of the cryogen is named Quench. See also Quenching.
Cryogenic liquids and their associated cold vapors can produce effects on the skin similar to a thermal burn and can cause frostbite. Prolonged breathing of extremely cold gases may damage the lungs and in absence of enough air or oxygen, asphyxiation and death can occur. Unprotected skin can stick to very cold metal (e.g. cooled by liquid helium) and then tear when pulled away. | | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Helium' (43).
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Renergen surges after xceptional™ helium concentration reports Monday, 29 March 2021 by www.businesslive.co.za | | |
Not just balloons: Helium shortage may deflate MRIs, airbags and research Friday, 3 May 2019 by eu.usatoday.com | | |
Liquid helium, the lifeblood of MRI machines Tuesday, 5 March 2019 by www.gasworld.com | | |
Preclinical Imaging Systems Reduce Environmental Impact Monday, 4 November 2019 by www.itnonline.com | | |
Huge newfound deposit of helium will keep MRI scanners running Monday, 27 June 2016 by www.newscientist.com | | |
Philips launches Ingenia Ambition X 1.5T MR with industry-first fully sealed magnet for more productive, helium-free operations Tuesday, 11 September 2018 by www.philips.com | | |
Tech firms, medical research threatened by helium shortage Thursday, 19 September 2013 by www.livemint.com | | |
How 9/11 Made The Global Helium Shortage Worse Thursday, 3 July 2014 by www.popsci.com | | |
Cooling MRI magnets without a continuous supply of scarce helium Tuesday, 13 August 2013 by www.wired.co.uk |
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Superconducting magnets are electromagnets that are partially built from
superconducting materials and therefore reach much higher magnetic field intensity.
The coil windings of superconducting magnets are made of wires of a type 2 superconductor (mostly used is niobium-titanium - up to 15 Tesla the critical temperature is less then 10 Kelvin). These coils have no resistance when operated at temperatures near absolute zero (-273.15°C, -459°F, 0 K).
Liquid helium (4.2 K) is commonly used as a coolant (sometimes in addition with a second cryogen liquid nitrogen as an intermediate thermal shield to reduce the boil-off rate of liquid helium), which consequently conclude refilling (intervals: liquid helium ~ 3 month, liquid nitrogen ~ 2 weeks). There are cryogen-free superconducting magnets with a closed-cycle refrigerating system at the horizon. Superconducting magnets typically exhibit field strengths of greater than 0.5 T, operate clinically up to 3 T, and have a horizontal field orientation, which makes them prone to missile effects without significant magnetic shielding.
See also Quenching.
See also the related poll result: ' In 2010 your scanner will probably work with a field strength of' | | | | • View the DATABASE results for 'Superconducting Magnet' (15).
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