• HENRY: That makes sense for explaining why a current of electrons flowing through a wire causes this compass needle to move, or how currents in the Earth's outer core generate the geomagnetic field. (britannica.com)
  • Earth's magnetic field, also known as the geomagnetic field, is a powerful, vital phenomenon that extends from the interior of the Earth into outer space, where it interacts with the solar wind, a stream of charged particles emanating from the Sun. (earth.com)
  • This magnetic field serves as a protective shield against solar radiation and plays a crucial role in many of Earth's life-sustaining systems. (earth.com)
  • The Earth's magnetic field originates primarily from a region called the outer core, which is a layer of molten iron and nickel located approximately 2,890 kilometers beneath the Earth's surface. (earth.com)
  • The combination of the fluid nature of the outer core, the Earth's rotation , and the convection currents driven by heat radiating from the deeper inner core, sets up a system where the moving, electrically conductive fluid generates a magnetic field, a process known as the geodynamo. (earth.com)
  • Therefore, the origin of the Earth's magnetic field is intimately tied to the physical properties and dynamic processes occurring in the Earth's outer core. (earth.com)
  • The Earth's magnetic field is approximately a dipole, with the magnetic field lines emerging from the south pole and re-entering at the north pole. (earth.com)
  • However, the Earth's magnetic field is not a perfect dipole, as there are small deviations and complexities in the field. (earth.com)
  • There are also small, localized variations in the magnetic field due to changes in the Earth's interior and crust. (earth.com)
  • The Earth's magnetic field does not align perfectly with the geographic poles for several reasons tied to the complex dynamics of how the field is generated. (earth.com)
  • The Earth's magnetic field is generated in the planet's outer core by a process known as the geodynamo. (earth.com)
  • It's also important to note that the geomagnetic poles, the north and south ends of the idealized dipole field of the Earth, do not coincide with the magnetic dip poles, which are the locations where the magnetic field lines are perpendicular to the Earth's surface. (earth.com)
  • The offset between the Earth's magnetic and geographic poles is significant for navigation. (earth.com)
  • Discovered in 1958 by the first U.S. science satellite, Explorer 1, the Van Allen radiation belts are defined by Earth's magnetic field, which traps electrically charged particles from from deep space and the sun, which periodically blasts torrents of high-energy particles toward Earth. (spaceflightnow.com)
  • Turns out that dogs and primates are the latest in a line of creatures that produce cryptochrome, the photopigment that lets migratory birds see the Earth's magnetic field. (extremetech.com)
  • This coming March NASA will be launching the Magnetospheric Multiscale Nission (MMS), a effort ten years in the making which will hopefully answer some of the many outstanding questions we have about Earth's magnetic field. (extremetech.com)
  • Earth's magnetic poles flipped 42,000 years ago, which may have triggered a global climate crisis, a new study found. (yahoo.com)
  • Earth's magnetic poles aren't static - they're generated by electric currents from the planet's liquid outer core, which is constantly in motion. (yahoo.com)
  • As of late, Earth's magnetic North pole has wandered considerably on a path toward northern Russia. (yahoo.com)
  • But it's probably no coincidence that Neanderthals died out following a major shift of Earth's magnetic poles, Turney's study suggests. (yahoo.com)
  • Earth's magnetic North and South poles - not to be confused with the planet's northernmost and southernmost geographic points - switch places. (yahoo.com)
  • In that process of flipping from North to South and South to North, effectively the Earth's magnetic field almost disappeared,' Turney said. (yahoo.com)
  • 10Be is produced by the interaction between galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) and solar energetic particles (SEPs) with the Earth's atmospheric constituents. (lu.se)
  • Earth is constantly bombarded by high-energy particles from the sun . (livescience.com)
  • And it opened the planet up to all these high-energy particles from outer space. (yahoo.com)
  • High-energy particles can also cause ionization. (medscape.com)
  • Radiation comes in two basic types: electromagnetic radiation transmitted by photons, and particle radiation consisting of electrons, protons, alpha particles, and so forth. (windows2universe.org)
  • A research team led by Prof. Frithjof Karsch at Bielefeld University has been using the JUWELS supercomputer at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) as part of the international HOTQCD collaboration to better understand the conditions under which particles made of protons, neutrons, and pions go through phase transitions, and how those changes impact the system's behavior and give rise to new forms of matter, such as quark-gluon plasma. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • Scientists will fire antiprotons at protons in order to create particles that will provide us with deeper insights into the mysterious strong force. (gsi.de)
  • Alpha particles are charged particles made up of 2 protons and 2 neutrons-essentially the nucleus of a helium atom. (medscape.com)
  • This is done by heating up hydrogen gas with a rapidly fluctuating electrical field, the electrons are thus released from the hydrogen molecules, leaving the protons. (lu.se)
  • The protons are accelerated in a 500-meter long linear accelerator with the help of high frequency electrical fields. (lu.se)
  • In much the same way that particles like electrons and quarks have fundamental properties called mass and electrical charge, most particles also have another intrinsic property called tiny magnet. (britannica.com)
  • SPEAKER 2: And you might think that since many, though not all, of the electrons are also moving that, like the current in a wire, they should generate magnetic fields due to that motion. (britannica.com)
  • The electrons in any filled shell zoom equally in all directions, so the currents they generate cancel out and generate no magnetic field. (britannica.com)
  • However, in a half-filled shell, all of the electrons are unpaired and their tiny magnets point in the same direction and add up, meaning that it's the intrinsic magnetism of the electrons in the outer shell that gives an atom the majority of its magnetic field. (britannica.com)
  • The team - which also includes scientists at the University of Hong Kong, the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan, Boston College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology - envisions their system as a powerful platform to develop a deeper understanding of anyons, which have very different properties from everyday particles like electrons. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The free flying electrons are accelerated from rest up to virtually the speed of light, by strong electrical fields. (lu.se)
  • The linear accelerator accelerates the electrons with the help of high frequency electrical fields. (lu.se)
  • The x-ray photons can also interact directly with the spin of the electrons, and so they can scatter off the magnetic structure. (lu.se)
  • One main type of radiation, particle radiation, is the result of subatomic particles hurtling at tremendous speeds. (windows2universe.org)
  • For decades, researchers have turned to the twin power of state-of-the-art particle accelerator facilities and world-class supercomputing facilities to better understand the mysterious world of subatomic particles. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • Ionizing radiation can also be in the form of particulate radiation, which includes subatomic l charged or neutral particles traveling near the speed of light and therefore with high very high kinetic energy. (medscape.com)
  • Join us at the premier meeting for Magnetic Particle Imaging in Würzburg, March 21-23 2022. (iwmpi.org)
  • In a sense, we Earthlings live within the outer atmosphere of our Sun . The solar wind fills the heliosphere with energetic particles and magnetic fields , extending the outermost reaches of the solar atmosphere well beyond the orbit of Pluto. (windows2universe.org)
  • Stellarator optimization is the numerical procedure by which the magnetic configuration is tailored to meet several design criteria, and neoclassical transport of bulk and energetic ions are two of them. (cern.ch)
  • What fundamental processes naturally produce such energetic particles? (digitaltrends.com)
  • Radiation is energy transmitted in the form of electromagnetic waves or energetic particles. (medscape.com)
  • Good acceleration requires the timing of the high frequency electrical fields to be optimal. (lu.se)
  • Good acceleration requires that the timing of the high frequency electrical fields is optimal. (lu.se)
  • And in fact, a magnetic field is just what an electric field becomes when an electrically charged object starts moving. (britannica.com)
  • The magnetic behavior of any everyday object is influenced by a fascinating combination of effects ranging from the level of particles, to atoms, collections of atoms, and collections of collections of atoms. (britannica.com)
  • Nanowerk News ) In a new study published last week in Science Advances ( 'Flocking ferromagnetic colloids' ), researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory created tiny swirling vortices out of magnetic particles, providing insight into the behavior that governs such systems-which opens up new opportunities for materials and devices with new properties. (nanowerk.com)
  • Researchers at Argonne National Laboratory created tiny swirling vortices out of magnetic particles, providing insight into the behavior that governs such systems-which opens up new opportunities for materials and devices with new properties. (nanowerk.com)
  • Then they applied an oscillating magnetic field and tinkered with the parameters, observing the behavior of the particles as they began to roll. (nanowerk.com)
  • Snezhko and his colleagues also found that "noise" from particles' surface imperfections was often a key to triggering the flocking behavior. (nanowerk.com)
  • These range from the behavior of particles in a plasma, to the large-scale structure of the universe. (earth.com)
  • In so doing, the twin Radiation Belt Storm Probes are expected to shed light on fundamental physics governing the behavior of fields and particles across the cosmos and on the more immediate impacts of space weather, which can cripple satellites, disrupt power grids, scramble communications and interfere with Global Positioning System navigation beacons. (spaceflightnow.com)
  • Watch a demonstration of the magnetic particle inspection method according to ASTM E1444 with basic steps for NDT using fluorescent magnetic particles. (magnaflux.com)
  • See how three common magnetic particle testing carriers perform in a standard ASTM E1444 settling volume test. (magnaflux.com)
  • The secondary electron beams acquire additional energy in the crossed external electric and magnetic fields. (usask.ca)
  • Laser and Particle Beams, Vol. 9, Issue. (cambridge.org)
  • Using beams of antiprotons, they want to create new particles that are predicted by theory but not yet observed. (gsi.de)
  • Theories de-scribing the strong force predict a -whole range of exotic particles con-sisting of different combinations of quarks and gluons. (gsi.de)
  • For superparamagnetic particles, which are discussed for the use in LOC or µTAS systems in the vast majority of cases, a controlled physical rotation by a rotating magnetic field is not possible. (nature.com)
  • To obtain a signal from the administered superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) particles, a sinusoidal changing external homogeneous magnetic field is applied. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • Magnetic particle imaging (MPI) has emerged as a suitable modality to quantify in vivo migration of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO)-labeled DC. (bvsalud.org)
  • The standardization imposed by the IMAS platform also allows a flexible coupling of the H&CD workflow with various transport solvers, particularly important to study burning plasmas in ITER with dominant alpha particle heating. (cern.ch)
  • Suppose that I want to compare the Kinetic Energy of an electron to the Kinetic Energy of an alpha particle if they both have the same radius of curvature in a magnetic field. (physicsforums.com)
  • Why does an alpha particle curve less in a magnetic field than a beta? (physicsforums.com)
  • We consider the dynamics of particles when the ABC field is superimposed onto a larger amplitude uniform magnetic field. (aps.org)
  • The quantum dynamics of a spin-1/2 charged particle in the presence of a magnetic field is analyzed for the general case where scalar and vector couplings are considered. (epj.org)
  • My expertise lies within the broad field of self-assembly and dynamics of experimental soft condensed matter, with a particular focus on amphiphilic (surfactants and lipids) and colloidal systems. (lu.se)
  • The strength of the chains depends on the strength of the magnetic field. (wikipedia.org)
  • In a dipolar magnetic field, the strength of the magnetic field decreases with increasing distance from the source. (earth.com)
  • We determine the fundamental frequencies of small harmonic oscillations of charged test particles around stable circular orbits in the equatorial plane of a magnetized black hole, and discuss the radial profiles of frequencies of the radial and latitudinal harmonic oscillations in dependence on the mass of the black hole and the strength of the magnetic field. (zdenekstuchlik.com)
  • Dipolar fields are found in many contexts in physics and astronomy, not just for planets. (earth.com)
  • Elementary Particle Physics: Gauss Centre for Supercomputing e.V. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • With the help of world-class supercomputing resources from the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS), a team of researchers led by Prof. Zoltan Fodor at the University of Wuppertal has continued to advance the state-of-the-art in elementary particle physics. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • Particle accelerators are among the world's most effective methods for experiments in materials science and physics. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • My research activities in the field of soft matter are a perfect admixture of the two classical disciplines of natural sciences, Chemistry, and Physics. (lu.se)
  • My main research interest is in fundamental physics mainly theoretical particle physics but also nuclear physics, general relativity and cosmology. (lu.se)
  • In this work, the motion characteristics of these MJPs will be investigated when they are steered by a magnetic field landscape over prototypical parallel-stripe domains, dynamically varied by superposed external magnetic field pulse sequences, in an aqueous medium. (nature.com)
  • Additionally, by modifying the frequency of the applied pulse sequence and the strengths of the individual field components, we observe a possible separation between a combined or an individual occurrence of these two types of motion. (nature.com)
  • As the area occupied by a molecular binding site is typically much smaller than the surface of micron-sized particles, not only a translational particle motion is necessary, but also a controlled particle rotation. (nature.com)
  • For a rotatory motion, magnetic Janus particles (MJPs) may be used instead. (nature.com)
  • The characteristic motion of particles in the chaotic ABC field is superdiffusive in space [1]. (aps.org)
  • When a charge particle enters a magnetic field at a direction perpendicular to the direction of motion, the path of the motion is circular. (askfilo.com)
  • Particle-in-cell simulations show that the nonlinear modification of electron trajectories by the RF magnetic field partially compensates the effects of electron thermal motion. (usask.ca)
  • In order to test the role of large-scale magnetic fields in quasi-periodic oscillation phenomena observed in microquasars, we study the oscillatory motion of charged particles in the vicinity of a Schwarzschild black hole immersed into an external asymptotically uniform magnetic field. (zdenekstuchlik.com)
  • The two-dimensional motion of a parabolically charged particle in a perpendicular magnetic field is strikingly different from either the two-dimensional cyclotron motion, or the oscillator motion. (edu.pl)
  • When such commensurability condition is not satisfied, path of particle is open and motion is no longer periodic. (edu.pl)
  • The red arrow indicates the predicted motion of a Starlink satellite through the field-of-view of the telescope. (scitechdaily.com)
  • New observations by NASA's NuSTAR reveal that auroras near both the planet's poles emit high-energy X-rays, which are produced when accelerated particles collide with Jupiter's atmosphere. (digitaltrends.com)
  • Those two characteristics mean that the planet's magnetosphere acts like a giant particle accelerator, and that's what makes these higher-energy emissions possible. (digitaltrends.com)
  • Most of the time, the planet's magnetic field deflects these solar attacks. (livescience.com)
  • Sure, the planet's magnetic field got weaker, allowing more cosmic rays to penetrate the atmosphere, but plant and animal life wasn't known to have been greatly affected. (yahoo.com)
  • Spatially resolved transport properties of a swarm of charged particles in spatially homogeneous and orthogonal dc electric and magnetic fields are investigated using a Monte Carlo simulation technique. (edu.au)
  • The magnetic lines of force are perpendicular to the direction of the electrical current, which may be either alternating current (AC) or some form of direct current (DC, or rectified AC). (tuv.com)
  • The potential of this approach has been demonstrated by the activation of T cells, where magnetic MJP have been remotely steered towards them enhancing the particle-cell recognition through a controlled spatial rotation of the particles due to an applied external magnetic field 8 . (nature.com)
  • It is found that, independent of the presence of a magnetic field, the spatial density profiles of the swarm relax to a Gaussian profile after a sufficient time. (edu.au)
  • It has been shown that magnetic particle imaging (MPI), an imaging method suggested in 2005, is capable of measuring the spatial distribution of magnetic nanoparticles. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • To achieve spatial encoding, a gradient field is superimposed. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • Conventional MPI works with a spatial encoding field that features a field free point (FFP). (uni-luebeck.de)
  • To increase sensitivity, an improved spatial encoding field, featuring a field free line (FFL) can be used. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • In this work, an FFL-based MPI scanner is presented that features a 2-D excitation field and, for the first time, an electronic rotation of the spatial encoding field. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • There are two different field topologies in magnetic particle imaging which enable the spatial encoding of the signal. (iwmpi.org)
  • In the magnetically controlled version, an applied magnetic field is used to lock the particles in place. (wikipedia.org)
  • Unlike a pure magnetic coupling though, this field takes no part in transmitting torque magnetically. (wikipedia.org)
  • This article reviews the limitations of operators with cardiac pacemaker's exposure to magnetic particle inspection equipment. (magnaflux.com)
  • TÜV Rheinland's magnetic particle inspection services detect surface and subsurface discontinuities in ferrous materials. (tuv.com)
  • Magnetic particle inspection (MPI) is an NDT testing process for detecting surface and subsurface discontinuities in ferrous materials. (tuv.com)
  • ISO 4986, Steel castings - Magnetic particle inspection. (qualitymag.com)
  • ISO 13664, Seamless and welded steel tubes for pressure purposes - Magnetic particle inspection of the tube ends for the detection of laminar imperfections. (qualitymag.com)
  • ISO 13665, Seamless and welded steel tubes for pressure purposes - Magnetic particle inspection of the tube body for the detection of surface imperfections. (qualitymag.com)
  • Welders are exposed to a range of fumes and gases (evaporated metal, metal oxides, hydrocarbons, nanoparticles, ozone, oxides of nitrogen (NOx) ) depending on the electrodes, filler wire and flux materials used in the process, but also physical exposures such as electric and magnetic fields (EMF) and ultraviolet (UV) radiation. (who.int)
  • Using the JUWELS supercomputer at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre, researchers are simulating the so-called Brout-Englert-Higgs mechanism, or how elementary particles acquire mass. (gauss-centre.eu)
  • In the world of elementary particles, it is not magic that is needed to make something disappear and be replaced by something completely new: In-stead, physicists can use antiparticles - the building blocks of antimatter. (gsi.de)
  • Elementary particles can possess electric and magnetic properties. (universetoday.com)
  • This image shows a particle bouncing back and forth from one pole of the Earth to the other. (windows2universe.org)
  • In a generic three-dimensional device, trapped particles move back and forth along the field lines with a non-zero average radial drift. (cern.ch)
  • The products were characterized using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). (cdc.gov)
  • But really, that's just technical mumbo jumbo saying that particles with electric charge also happen to be tiny magnets. (britannica.com)
  • The red cylinder is parallel to the electric field. (wolfram.com)
  • As a result of the dynamo effect, these electric currents generate and maintain the magnetic field. (earth.com)
  • These movements of conductive fluid create electric currents, which in turn produce the magnetic field. (earth.com)
  • Hall thrusters, where plasma is maintained by the DC electric field crossed with the stationary magnetic field, are efficient low-thrust devices for spacecraft propulsion. (usask.ca)
  • In the simulation, two operating conditions, electric currents and strength of externally applied magnetic fields, were parametrically varied in a range of 300 A to 500 A and 0.2 T to 0.8 T, respectively. (elsevierpure.com)
  • A changing electric field creates a magnetic field and vice versa. (universetoday.com)
  • Electromagnetic radiation is composed of massless waves of oscillating electric and magnetic fields. (medscape.com)
  • Among those physical agents considered suitable for evaluation by the Monographs, and assigned high priority at that time, were electric and magnetic fields, the radioactive isotope iodine-131, and radioactive wastes. (who.int)
  • Physical exposures such as electric and magnetic fields (EMF) and ultraviolet (UV) radiation are also common. (who.int)
  • The general concept is not to allow for charge accumulation at any node, as otherwise these would establish a strong electric field repelling the charges (on time scales of typically less than a picosecond, see Sec. 5). (lu.se)
  • Estat(r) is the quasi-stationary electric field satisfying Estat = (r)/0 and × Estat = 0. (lu.se)
  • This thesis presents the study of kinetic effects in inductively coupled plasmas and Hall thrusters carried out by means of particle-in-cell simulations. (usask.ca)
  • An advective electromagnetic 1d3v particle-in-cell code is developed for modelling the inductively coupled plasmas. (usask.ca)
  • An electrostatic direct implicit 1d3v particle-in-cell code EDIPIC is developed for plane geometry simulations of Hall thruster plasmas. (usask.ca)
  • Inductively coupled plasmas sustained by the external RF electromagnetic field are widely used in material processing reactors and electrodeless lighting sources. (usask.ca)
  • Using recent data from NASA's Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope, scientists have now found evidence for the left-handed galactic-scale magnetic fields that are predicted to exist by current theories for the scarcity of antimatter. (extremetech.com)
  • We further assume the ABC field to have sinusoidal time dependence, with a prescribed frequency. (aps.org)
  • Anyons are quasiparticles - or particle-like "excitations" - that can act as fractions of an electron. (scitechdaily.com)
  • We are working on a number of projects exploring novel magnetic arrangements and the excitations that define them. (lu.se)
  • Magnetic objects are able to magically attract at long distances because they generate magnetic fields that extend invisibly out beyond the object. (britannica.com)
  • Inspectors commonly use magnetic yokes to generate a magnetic field for magnetic particle inspections (MPIs). (tuv.com)
  • In the solid state these individual magnetic moments may cooperate to generate a wide variety of macroscopic magnetic states. (lu.se)
  • There are broadly two classes of event generators: one which uses exact matrix element calculation up to a fixed order and are used for processes involving a few high particles (matrix element or ME generators) and the other which uses an approximate scheme to generate events up to all orders and involving many particles, most of which are relatively soft and collinear (parton shower or PS generators). (lu.se)
  • The force of magnetism causes material to point along the direction the magnetic force points. (windows2universe.org)
  • The intrinsic magnetism takes the place of the strong magnetic field typically required for the fractional quantum Hall state. (scitechdaily.com)
  • This picture shows the flowing of particles into and out of the auroral zone, as Field-Aligned currents (FAC's) take at short-cut through the atmosphere. (windows2universe.org)
  • Ionization in the atmosphere is mainly caused by cosmic ray particles, which have their origin outside our solar system. (nature.com)
  • The ABC fields correspond to Beltrami flows. (aps.org)
  • Swirl flows induced by the arc rotation hinder the particles from reaching the hot plasma jet. (elsevierpure.com)
  • The magnetic dip poles are what compasses align with, and they are usually located closer to the geographic poles than the geomagnetic poles. (earth.com)
  • In particular, the mission will create the first detailed three-dimensional maps of a process known as magnetic reconnection -- the phenomenon we experience most directly as geomagnetic storms, solar flares, and even the aurora. (extremetech.com)
  • The flux of GCRs is modulated by the varying strength of the magnetic fields of the Earth and the Sun. Measurement of 10Be concentrations from polar ice cores is thus a valuable tool to reconstruct the variations in the geomagnetic field and solar activity levels. (lu.se)
  • The RBSP satellites will fly through both main radiation belts, using a suite of instruments to precisely measure the fields and particles, how the belts expand and contract as solar storms pass through and how they change over time. (spaceflightnow.com)
  • The field lines are somewhat distorted by the solar wind. (earth.com)
  • Some planets possess strong global magnetic fields that interact with the solar wind. (windows2universe.org)
  • During these reversals, the magnetic shield that protects our planet from solar wind (charged particles streaming off the sun) gets weaker. (yahoo.com)
  • In this case, after a sufficiently long time has elapsed, the open paths of the particle fill a whole annulus, a region lying between two concentric circles of different radii. (edu.pl)
  • 1 This average velocity is responsible for the Hall effect and an associated change in resistivity by the magnetic field. (lu.se)
  • The presence of a surface or subsurface discontinuity in the material allows the magnetic flux to leak. (tuv.com)
  • If an area of flux leakage is detected, the particles are attracted to this area. (tuv.com)
  • Solar activity modulates the flux of cosmic ray particles on time scales from days to millennia, whereas on geological time scales it is the position of the solar system in our Galaxy, which is important for ionization 4 , 5 . (nature.com)
  • Fume particles contain a wide variety of oxides and salts of metals and other compounds, which are produced mainly from electrodes, filler wire and flux materials. (who.int)
  • S dt S dt where the flux is allowed to vary both by a time dependence of the magnetic field and a move- ment of the wire. (lu.se)
  • Our findings bear importance for lab-on-a-chip systems, where particle immobilization on a surface via analyte bridges shall be used for low concentration analyte detection and a particle rotation over a defined position of a substrate may dramatically increase the immobilization (and therefore analyte detection) probability. (nature.com)
  • In lab-on-a-chip systems (LOC) or micro-total-analysis-systems (µTAS) magnetic particles may constitute a key component since a controlled particle actuation allows for the implementation of a variety of functionalities like fluid mixing, sorting, drug uptake and delivery as well as detection of analyte biomolecules 3 , 4 . (nature.com)
  • One of the analyte detection strategies is the dimerization of particles or the immobilization of particles on a substrate via analyte bridges. (nature.com)
  • For the real-time CHIKV, transcription-mediated amplification assay, plasma samples (0.5 mL) were tested on the fully automated Panther system which performs magnetic target specific capture, amplification, and real-time detection in the presence of an internal control. (cdc.gov)
  • When the topology of an initial magnetic field does not correspond to these two classes of solutions, reconnection is taking place and a current sheet is produced. (harvard.edu)
  • abstract = "The authors performed a time-dependent, three-dimensional numerical simulation of a non-transferred DC plasma spray with externally applied magnetic fields. (elsevierpure.com)
  • Since the particles can be administered as biocompatible suspensions, this method promises to perform well as a tracer-based medical imaging technique. (uni-luebeck.de)
  • In vivo tracking of adenoviral-transduced iron oxide-labeled bone marrow-derived dendritic cells using magnetic particle imaging. (bvsalud.org)
  • RELEVANCE STATEMENT Tracking the in vivo fate of DC using noninvasive quantifiable magnetic particle imaging can potentially serve as a surrogate marker of therapeutic effectiveness . (bvsalud.org)
  • â ¢ Magnetic particle imaging is a suitable modality to quantify in vivo dendritic cell migration. (bvsalud.org)
  • â ¢ Magnetic particle imaging focused field of view overcomes dynamic range limitation. (bvsalud.org)