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; and Magnetic
; Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging ( CMR ): Magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI ) of the heart that utilizes the ECG for gating and to look at specific mechanical functions of the heart.
; Magnetic
This is a collection of fifteen selected non-fiction entries that had been published in Analog magazine over the years ; it includes five articles authored or co-authored by Zubrin, including " The Hypersonic Skyhook ", " Mars Direct: A Proposal for the Rapid Exploration and Colonization of the Red Planet " ( co-authored with David A. Baker ), " Colonizing the Outer Solar System ", " Terraforming Mars " ( co-authored with Christopher McKay ), and " The Magnetic Sail ".
The Carlson Center features a diverse research portfolio ; its major research areas include Digital Image Restoration, Remote Sensing, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Printing Systems Research, Color Science, Nanoimaging, Imaging Detectors, Astronomical Imaging, Visual Perception, and Ultrasonic Imaging.
Magnetic systems often show strong and variable polarization in their optical light, and are therefore sometimes called polars ; these often exhibit small-amplitude brightness fluctuations at what's presumed to be the period of rotation of the white dwarf
Stukeley used some incomplete data about the variation of the North Magnetic Pole ; he extrapolated that it oscillated in a regular pattern.
Ross, who in 1831 had located the North Magnetic Pole, spent the next two years vainly searching for a sea passage to the South Pole ; later, his name was given to the ice shelf and the sea surrounding it.
* ( 15 ) "( Magnetic ) Toy " ( patent no. 1, 422, 775 ; 11 July 1922: Leon Martocci-Pisculli )
My Later Endeavors ; The Discovery of the Rotating Magnetic Field
* Raymond Vahan Damadian ( M. D., Class of 1960 ), Pioneer of Magnetic Resonance Imaging ( MRI ); founder, president, and chairman, FONAR Corporation ; professor of medicine and radiology, SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn.
; Magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI )
He is the first person in history to reach the Geographic and Magnetic North and South Poles as well as climb the highest peaks in all seven continents ; the Adventurers Grand Slam.
The report concludes that a small percentage of sightings that can not be easily explained are caused by atmospheric plasma phenomenon similar to ball lightning ; Magnetic and other energy fields produced by these " buoyant plasma formations " are responsible for the appearance of so-called " Black Triangles " as well as having hallucinogenic effects on the human mind, inducing experiences of Close Encounters.
; Magnetic tape: Magnetic tape has long been the most commonly used medium for bulk data storage, backup, archiving, and interchange.
Magnetic bearings support moving machinery without physical contact ; for example, they can levitate a rotating shaft and permit relative motion with very low friction and no mechanical wear.
Magnetic bearings support the highest speeds of any kind of bearing ; they have no known maximum relative speed.
Holland – Dozier – Holland are mentioned ( along with the Four Tops and their vocalist Levi Stubbs, as well as Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong ) in the lyrics of the song " Levi Stubbs ' Tears " from the 1986 Billy Bragg album Talking with the Taxman about Poetry ; and also in the lyrics of The Magnetic Fields ' song " The Death of Ferdinand de Saussure ", from their 1999 album 69 Love Songs.
The band's relationship with Trustkill was always adversarial at best ; the label altered the track listing for Magnetic North without the band's knowledge, and in an interview in the wake of the band's breakup, former drummer Jason Trabue accused the label of providing the band with insufficient promotion and financial support throughout their tenure on Trustkill, as well as withholding royalties.
In his book he listed the expedition's main achievements: proof that an expedition could live on Victoria Land over winter ; a year's continuous magnetic and meteorological observations ; an estimate of the current position of the South Magnetic Pole ; discoveries of new species of insects and shallow-water fauna ; coastal mapping and the discovery of new islands ; the first landing on Ross Island and, finally, the scaling of the Great Ice Barrier and the sledging to 78 ° 50 ' S, " the furthest south ever reached by man ".

; and resonance
Their semi-major axes show a preference for the middle of the main belt ; arguably, smaller objects close to the limiting resonances have been either captured into resonance or have their orbits modified by Neptune.
In 1963, Olivier directed Peter O ' Toole as Hamlet in the inaugural performance of the newly formed National Theatre ; critics found resonance between O ' Toole's Hamlet and John Osborne's hero, Jimmy Porter, from Look Back in Anger.
* Guadalupe Portal ; Aliosvi Rodriguez Whole body magnetic resonance imaging in early diagnosis in Trinidad BMJ ( 2010 ) ISSN 1756-1833 url = http :// www. bmj. com / rapid-response / 2011 / 12 / 19 / re-whole-body-magnetic-resonance-imaging
The special case of 1: 1 resonance ( between bodies with similar orbital radii ) causes large Solar System bodies to eject most other bodies sharing their orbits ; this is part of the much more extensive process of clearing the neighbourhood, an effect that is used in the current definition of a planet.
The gradual depletion of the Kuiper belt would have decreased the precession rate of Neptune's orbit ; eventually, the frequencies matched, and Saturn's axial precession was captured into the spin-orbit resonance, leading to an increase in Saturn's obliquity.
This resonance applies only to bodies on highly inclined orbits ; as a consequence, such orbits tend to be unstable, since the growing eccentricity would result in small pericenters, typically leading to a collision or ( for large moons ) destruction by tidal forces.
However, the two are constrained by their mutual resonance with Neptune to always be in opposite phases of their orbits ; Orcus is thus sometimes described as the " anti-Pluto ".
Many measures are part of modern psychophysiology including measures of brain activity such as ERPs, brain waves ( electroencephalography, EEG ), fMRI ( functional magnetic resonance imaging ), measures of skin conductance ( skin conductance response, SCR ; galvanic skin response, GSR ), cardiovascular measures ( heart rate, HR ; beats per minute, BPM ; heart rate variability, HRV ; vasomotor activity ), muscle activity ( electromyography, EMG ), changes in pupil diameter with thought and emotion ( pupillometry ) and eye movements, recorded via the electro-oculogram ( EOG ) and direction-of-gaze methods.
The name refers only to the orbital resonance and does not imply common physical characteristics ; it was invented to describe those bodies smaller than Pluto ( hence the diminutive ) following similar orbits.
Because individual PET scans are more expensive than " conventional " imaging with computed tomography ( CT ) and magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI ), expansion of FDG-PET in cost-constrained health services will depend on proper health technology assessment ; this problem is a difficult one because structural and functional imaging often cannot be directly compared, as they provide different information.
Kathleen Lonsdale's 1928 structure of hexamethylbenzene established the hexagonal symmetry of benzene and showed a clear difference in bond length between the aliphatic C – C bonds and aromatic C – C bonds ; this finding led to the idea of resonance between chemical bonds, which had profound consequences for the development of chemistry.
Some work is being done that would use nuclear resonance ; however there is no reliable evidence that any nuclear resonance processes have been scaled up to production.
Antennas which are the wrong length to be resonant, or which must operate at a different frequency at which they are not resonant, are often brought into resonance by loading ; adding capacitors or inductors in series with them.
; Mechanical and acoustic resonance
The special case of 1: 1 resonance ( between bodies with similar orbital radii ) causes large Solar System bodies to clear the neighborhood around their orbits by ejecting nearly everything else around them ; this effect is used in the current definition of a planet.
The model's more interesting points are that it ( 1 ) allows for attention and other top-down influences on encoding ; ( 2 ) it uses resonance to implement parallel, cue-dependent retrieval ; ( 3 ) it explains memory for recency ; ( 4 ) it offers a single-system account of repetition and priming, and ( 5 ) the power law of forgetting can be derived from the model's assumption in a straightforward way.

; and angiography
The improved resolution of CT has permitted the development of new investigations, which may have advantages ; compared to conventional radiography, for example, CT angiography avoids the invasive insertion of a catheter.
Siemens ' medical products include clinical information technology systems ; hearing instruments ; in-vitro diagnostics equipment ; imaging equipment including angiography, computed tomography, fluoroscopy, magnetic resonance, mammography, molecular imaging ultrasound, and x-ray equipment ; and radiation oncology and particle therapy equipment.
The term angiography is strictly defined as based on projectional radiography ; however, the term has been applied to newer vascular imaging techniques such as CT angiography and MR angiography.
Diagnostic services-Facilities include positron emission tomography ; X-ray / digital scanner rooms ; computerised axial tomography scanners ; ultrasound room ; magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI ); and angiography rooms.
However, angiography is only motion or still images of dye mixed with the blood with the arterial lumen and never show atheroma ; the wall of arteries, including atheroma with the arterial wall remain invisible.
In fact, the name derives from its angiographic image ; the " puff of smoke ," which is how moyamoya loosely translates from Japanese, refers to the appearance of multiple compensatorily dilated striate vessels seen on angiography.

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