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#1 Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » Come Quotes - V » Today 17:02:14

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Come Quotes - V

1. Communism has never come to power in a country that was not disrupted by war or corruption, or both. - John F. Kennedy

2. The changes in our life must come from the impossibility to live otherwise than according to the demands of our conscience not from our mental resolution to try a new form of life. - Leo Tolstoy

3. It is clear our nation is reliant upon big foreign oil. More and more of our imports come from overseas. - George W. Bush

4. Where would you be without friends? The people to pick you up when you need lifting? We come from homes far from perfect, so you end up almost parent and sibling to your friends - your own chosen family. There's nothing like a really loyal, dependable, good friend. Nothing. - Jennifer Aniston

5. An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come. - Victor Hugo

6. It's never paid to bet against America. We come through things, but its not always a smooth ride. - Warren Buffett

7. Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end; then stop. - Lewis Carroll

8. Corruption is the enemy of development, and of good governance. It must be got rid of. Both the government and the people at large must come together to achieve this national objective. - Pratibha Patil.

#2 This is Cool » Microwave Oven » Today 16:43:12

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Microwave Oven

Gist

A microwave oven heats food using electromagnetic waves that excite water molecules, causing them to vibrate and generate heat, allowing for quick reheating, defrosting, and cooking, making it a convenient, energy-efficient appliance for modern kitchens, especially for busy individuals. Its main uses include rapidly warming leftovers, thawing frozen foods, making popcorn, steaming vegetables, and even baking with convection models. 

The most common types of microwaves include built-in, over-the-range, countertop, undercounter, wall oven and microwave combination, smart and convection microwaves.

Summary

A microwave oven, or simply microwave, is an electric oven that heats and cooks food by exposing it to electromagnetic radiation in the microwave frequency range. This induces polar molecules in the food to rotate and produce thermal energy (heat) in a process known as dielectric heating. Microwave ovens heat food quickly and efficiently because the heating effect is fairly uniform in the outer 25–38 mm (1–1.5 inches) of a homogeneous, high-water-content food item.

The development of the cavity magnetron in the United Kingdom made possible the production of electromagnetic waves of a small enough wavelength (microwaves) to efficiently heat up water molecules. American electrical engineer Percy Spencer is generally credited with developing and patenting the world's first commercial microwave oven, the "Radarange", which was first sold in 1947. He based it on British radar technology which had been developed before and during World War II.

Raytheon later licensed its patents for a home-use microwave oven that was introduced by Tappan in 1955, but it was still too large and expensive for general home use. Sharp Corporation introduced the first microwave oven with a turntable between 1964 and 1966. The countertop microwave oven was introduced in 1967 by the Amana Corporation. After microwave ovens became affordable for residential use in the late 1970s, their use spread into commercial and residential kitchens around the world, and prices fell rapidly during the 1980s. In addition to cooking food, microwave ovens are used for heating in many industrial processes.

Microwave ovens are a common kitchen appliance and are popular for reheating previously cooked foods and cooking a variety of foods. They rapidly heat foods which can easily burn or turn lumpy if cooked in conventional pans, such as butter, fats, chocolate, or porridge. Microwave ovens usually do not directly brown or caramelize food, since they rarely attain the necessary temperature to produce Maillard reactions. Exceptions occur in cases where the oven is used to heat frying-oil and other oily items (such as bacon), which attain far higher temperatures than that of boiling water.

Microwave ovens have a limited role in professional cooking, because the boiling-range temperatures of a microwave oven do not produce the flavorful chemical reactions that frying, browning, or baking at a higher temperature produces. However, there are hybrid appliances that combine infrared radiation, hot air, and microwaves, such as convection microwave ovens.

Details

"Microwave" is just short for "microwave oven". Both terms mean the same thing: an appliance that uses microwave radiation to heat food. Cooking food in this way is called "microwaving". An oven, on the other hand, has a heating element which heats the air inside, which then heats the food. Cooking food in this way is generally called "baking", though there are a lot of other things (e.g. roasting) you can also reasonably do in an oven.

So if all you have is a microwave, then all you can do is microwave (not bake). And if you have an oven, then you can bake (but of course you can't microwave).

There also exist combinations, which are capable of both microwaving and baking, i.e. they have a microwave emitter and a heating element. However, remember that in the US - and thus on much of the internet - something talking about a "microwave oven" likely does not mean this combination, but simply microwave heating. Names like "convection microwave oven with grill", "combination microwave/oven" do refer to these combinations, though. I've also seen "speed oven". You may sometimes have seen people referring to these combination microwave/ovens as a "microwave oven" (I think this may be common in Indian English), but that's really just imprecise language.

Some sites say that a "microwave" is only for heating or re-heating cooked food. Whereas, in "microwave ovens", you can microwave and bake. Is that true?

It sounds like in this statement, "microwave oven" is careless language, referring to a combination microwave and oven. (It doesn't make any sense at all otherwise; the two things are the same thing, so of course you can do the same things in them.)

So the question is really, what can you do in a microwave vs an oven, or a combination microwave/oven?

It's true that microwaves are mainly used for reheating cooked food, and it's true that they can't actually bake. However, they can do a lot more than reheat food; there are a lot of kinds of cooking besides baking. For example, microwaves are great at simmering/boiling and steaming, and it doesn't matter if the food was cooked already or not. The recipes you're talking about are probably mostly in those kinds of categories, but if you're interested, How do I know if a food or recipe can be made in a microwave oven? discusses in a bit more detail what works in microwaves.

The big things that you can do with ovens but not microwaves are the things that actually need the steady dry heat of baking. You can't bake bread or cookies or roast a chicken in a microwave. Microwaves hold in a lot of steam and don't get terribly hot, so you can't generally get things to brown or crisp up. They also don't really hold a temperature like you need for baking, they just pump more and more heat into the food.

Additional Information

A microwave oven heats food by passing microwave radiation through it, a process known as dielectric heating. Microwaves are a form of non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation with a frequency between 300 MHz and 300 GHz. Microwave ovens use frequencies in one of the ISM (industrial, scientific, medical) bands, so they do not interfere with other vital radio services.

Dielectric heating takes advantage of the electric dipole structure of water molecules, fats, and many other substances in the food. These molecules have a partial positive charge at one end and a partial negative charge at the other. In an alternating electric field, they will rotate as they continually try to align themselves to the field. Once the electrical field's energy is initially absorbed, heat will gradually spread through the object similarly to any other contact with a hotter body.

It is a common misconception that microwave ovens heat food at a special resonance of water molecules in the food. Instead, all polar molecules participate, and dielectric heating for each molecule can happen over a wide range of frequencies.

Typically, consumer ovens work around a nominal 2.45 gigahertz (GHz) – a wavelength of 12.2 centimetres (4.80 in) in the 2.4 GHz to 2.5 GHz ISM band – while large industrial / commercial ovens often use 915 megahertz (MHz) – 32.8 centimetres (12.9 in). Among other differences, the longer wavelength of a commercial microwave oven allows the initial heating effects to begin deeper within the food or liquid, and therefore become evenly spread within its bulk sooner, as well as raising the temperature deep within the food more quickly.

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#3 Science HQ » Myopia » Today 15:54:32

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Myopia

Gist

Myopia, or nearsightedness, is a common, often progressive refractive error where the eyeball grows too long or the cornea is too curved, causing light to focus in front of the retina rather than on it. It results in blurred distant vision, with symptoms like eye strain, headaches, and squinting. Affecting roughly 30% of the global population, it is commonly treated with glasses, contacts, or refractive surgery (e.g., LASIK).

Myopia, or nearsightedness, is a common vision condition where distant objects appear blurry because the eye focuses light in front of the retina instead of directly on it, often due to an elongated eyeball or a cornea that is too curved. It allows clear vision for close-up tasks but makes seeing far away difficult, leading to squinting, eye strain, and headaches. It's typically managed with glasses, contacts, or surgery, and its development is linked to genetics and increased near work like screen time. 

Summary

Myopia, also known as near-sightedness and short-sightedness, is an eye condition where light from distant objects focuses in front of, instead of on, the retina. As a result, distant objects appear blurry, while close objects appear normal. Other symptoms may include headaches and eye strain. Severe myopia is associated with an increased risk of macular degeneration, retinal detachment, cataracts, and glaucoma.

Myopia results from the length of the eyeball growing too long or less commonly the lens being too strong. It is a type of refractive error. Diagnosis is by the use of cycloplegics during eye examination.

Myopia is less common in people who spent more time outside during childhood. This lower risk may be due to greater exposure to sunlight. Myopia can be corrected with eyeglasses, contact lenses, or by refractive surgery. Eyeglasses are the simplest and safest method of correction. Contact lenses can provide a relatively wider corrected field of vision, but are associated with an increased risk of infection. Refractive surgeries such as LASIK and PRK permanently change the shape of the cornea. Other procedures include implantable collamer lens (ICL) placement inside the anterior chamber in front of the natural eye lens. ICL does not affect the cornea.

Myopia is the most common eye disorder and is estimated to affect 1.5 billion people (22% of the world population). Rates vary significantly in different areas of the world. Rates among adults are between 15% and 49%. Among children, it affects 1% of rural Nepalese, 4% of South Africans, 12% of people in the US, and 37% in some large Chinese cities. In China the proportion of girls is slightly higher than boys. Rates have increased since the 1950s. Uncorrected myopia is one of the most common causes of vision impairment globally along with cataracts, macular degeneration, and vitamin A deficiency.

Details

Myopia (nearsightedness) is a common condition that’s usually diagnosed before age 20. It affects your distance vision — you can see objects that are near, but you have trouble viewing objects that are farther away like grocery store aisle markers or road signs. Myopia treatments include glasses, contact lenses or surgery.

Overview:

What is myopia?

Myopia is the medical name for nearsightedness, which means that you can see objects that are near clearly but have difficulty seeing objects that are farther away. For example, if you have nearsightedness, you may not be able to make out highway signs until they’re just a few feet away.

Myopia affects a significant percentage of people. It’s an eye focus disorder that’s normally corrected with eyeglasses, contact lenses or surgery.

How common is myopia?

Myopia is common. According to one estimate, more than 40% of people in the U.S. have nearsightedness. This number is rapidly rising, especially among school-aged children. Eye experts expect this trend to continue in the coming decades.

One in four parents has a child with some degree of nearsightedness. Some eye experts believe that if your child spends a great deal of time engaged in “near” activities, such as reading or using smartphones and computers, it may raise their risk of developing myopia.

Are there types of myopia?

Eye specialists divide myopia broadly into simple myopia and pathologic myopia. Pathologic myopia is a newer name for degenerative myopia.

People with simple myopia have contact lenses or eyeglasses that help provide clear vision, while those with pathologic myopia may not be able to have clear vision even with corrective lenses.

Symptoms and Causes:

What are the symptoms of myopia?

If you have nearsightedness, you may notice:

* Faraway objects look blurred or fuzzy.
* Close items appear clear.
* Headaches.
* Eye strain.
* Squinting.
* Tiredness when driving, playing sports or looking more than a few feet away.

Some additional symptoms of myopia to watch for in your children include:

* Poor performance in school.
* Shortened attention span.
* Holding objects close to their face.

Most cases of myopia are mild and easily managed with eyeglasses, contact lenses or refractive surgery.

What causes myopia?

If you have myopia, more than likely, at least one or both of your biological parents do, too. Eye experts are still unsure of the exact cause of myopia, but believe it to be a mix of hereditary and environmental factors.

It’s possible that you can inherit the ability to be myopic. If your lifestyle produces just the right conditions, you’ll develop it. For example, if you use your eyes for a lot of close-up work, like reading or working on a computer, you may develop myopia.

Myopia usually appears in childhood. Typically, the condition can worsen in early childhood but tends to level off by the end of teen years.

Because the light coming into your eyes doesn’t focus correctly, images are unclear. Think of it as being a little like a misdirected spotlight. If you shine a spotlight on the incorrect place in the distance, you won’t be able to see the correct object clearly.

What are the risk factors for myopia?

Risk factors for nearsightedness may include:

* A family history of myopia.
* Spending a lot of time doing “close-up” work, like reading or using screens like those on smartphones or computers.
* Not spending a lot of time outdoors. Certain studies indicate that this may be a factor in developing myopia.
* Ethnicity. Some groups of people have higher rates of myopia than others.

What are the complications of myopia?

In most cases, providers can treat nearsightedness with glasses, contact lenses or corrective surgery, like LASIK. However, some cases of pathologic myopia can lead to more serious eye conditions, including:

* Cataracts.
* Glaucoma.
* Optic neuropathy.
* Neovascularization.
* Retinal detachment.

Pathologic myopia may make you more vulnerable to other more serious eye conditions. These include:

* Developing unwanted blood vessels in your eye (neovascularization).
* Glaucoma.
* Myopic optic neuropathy.
* Retinal detachment.
* Cataracts.
* High myopia happens when your child’s eyeballs are too long, or their corneas are too steep.

Diagnosis and Tests:

How is myopia diagnosed?

An eye care provider can diagnose myopia using standard eye exams. Providers usually diagnose myopia in childhood, but it can also develop in adults because of visual stress or diabetes.

Testing an adult for myopia

Your provider will evaluate how your eyes focus light and measure the power of any corrective lenses you may need. First, they’ll test your visual acuity (sharpness) by asking you to read letters on an eye chart. Then, they’ll use a lighted retinoscope to measure how your retina reflects light.

Your provider may also use a phoropter. A phoropter is an instrument that measures the amount of your refractive error by placing a series of lenses in front of your eyes. This is how your provider measures the lens strength you need.

Testing your child for myopia

Your pediatrician will check your child’s eyes at each well-child visit. A first eye exam should be before age 1, if possible. If your child has no evident eye problems, then schedule a repeat eye exam before kindergarten.

As myopia runs in families, if your child has family members with vision issues, it’s even more important to test their eyes early. If you or your pediatrician notice any vision issues, your child may be referred to an optometrist or pediatric ophthalmologist.

During a children’s eye exam, your eye care provider will do a physical examination of your child’s eyes and check for a regular light reflex. For children between the ages of 3 and 5 years, your provider will also conduct vision screenings using eye chart tests, pictures, letters or the “tumbling E game,” also called the “Random E’s Visual Acuity Test.”

As your child’s vision continues to change as they grow, continue to make sure they get vision screenings by their pediatrician or eye care provider before first grade and every two years thereafter. While most schools conduct eye screenings, they’re usually not complete enough to diagnose myopia. Providers diagnose most children when they’re between the ages of 3 and 12.

Your provider may mention categories — mild, moderate or high myopia. These terms refer to the degree of nearsightedness as measured by refractive error. Refractive errors are issues with the natural shape of your eyes that make your vision blurry. It’s possible to have myopia and another refractive error, like astigmatism.

Management and Treatment:

How is myopia treated?

Glasses or contact lenses can correct myopia in children and adults. For adults only (with rare exceptions for children), there are several types of refractive surgeries that can also correct myopia.

With myopia, your prescription for glasses or contact lenses is a negative number, such as -3.00. The higher the number, the stronger your lenses will be. The prescription helps your eye focus light on your retina, clearing up your distance vision.

* Eyeglasses: The most popular way for most people to correct myopia is with eyeglasses. Depending on the degree of vision correction needed, you’ll wear eyeglasses either daily or only when you need distance vision. You may only need glasses for driving. Some kids with myopia may only need glasses to play ball, watch a movie or view the chalkboard. Some people may need to wear glasses constantly to see clearly. A single-vision lens will make distance vision clearer. But people over 40 who have myopia may require a bifocal or progressive lens to see clearly both near and far.
* Contact lenses: Some people find that their distance vision is sharper and wider with contact lenses. A potential downside is they require more care to keep clean. Ask your provider which type might be right for your myopia level and other refractive errors.
* Ortho-k or CRT: Some people with mild myopia may be candidates for temporary corneal refractive contact lenses that you wear to bed to reshape your cornea temporarily, long enough to see for your daily activities.
* LASIK is a laser-assisted in situ keratomileus procedure, the most common surgery to correct nearsightedness. In a LASIK procedure, your ophthalmologist uses a laser to cut a flap through the top of your cornea, reshape the inner corneal tissue and then drop the flap back into place.
* LASEK is a laser-assisted subepithelial keratectomy procedure. In a LASEK procedure, your ophthalmologist uses a laser to cut a flap through only the top layer (epithelium) of your cornea, reshape the outer layers, and then close the flap.
* PRK is short for “photorefractive keratectomy,” which is a type of laser eye surgery used to correct mild or moderate nearsightedness. It may also correct farsightedness and/or astigmatism. In a PRK procedure, your ophthalmologist cuts off the front surface of your cornea and uses a laser to reshape the surface, which flattens it and allows light rays to focus on your retina. Unlike LASIK, the ophthalmologist doesn’t cut a flap, and your cornea will regrow its top layer in one to two weeks. PRK is better for people with corneas that are thinner or have a rough surface because it disrupts less corneal tissue than a comparable LASIK surgery.
* Phakic intraocular lenses: These are an option for people who have high myopia or whose corneas are too thin for PRK or LASIK. Your provider places phakic intraocular lenses inside of your eye just in front of your natural lens.
* Intraocular lens implant: This allows your ophthalmologist to surgically insert a new lens in your eye, replacing your natural one. This procedure happens before a cataract develops.
* Vision therapy: This is an option if spasms of your focusing muscles cause myopia. You can strengthen the muscles through eye exercises and improve your focus. This treatment isn’t appropriate for everyone with myopia. After an eye exam, your ophthalmologist will let you know if it’s an option for you.

Outlook / Prognosis:

What can I expect if I have myopia?

Myopia is a condition that doesn’t go away. Treatments include using glasses or contact lenses. You may be able to get surgery to correct your vision.

What is the outlook for myopia?

The outlook for being nearsighted may differ depending on the type of myopia.

Usually, providers can treat simple myopia easily. In rare cases of high myopia or pathologic myopia, your outlook may be different.

High myopia usually stops getting worse between the ages of 20 and 30. You’ll still be able to get glasses or contact lenses or you may be able to have surgery.

High myopia may lead to pathologic myopia and the possibility of more serious sight conditions later in life. These complications can lead to loss of sight.

Regular eye exams are important for everyone but are especially if you have high myopia or pathologic myopia. You should follow the schedule set out by your eye care provider.

Prevention:

Can myopia be prevented?

You can’t prevent myopia as it’s a condition that tends to run in families, but you may be able to lower your risk of nearsightedness in some ways.

How can I lower my risk of developing myopia?

Some eye experts believe that you may be able to decrease your or your child’s risk of developing myopia by getting enough time outside and limiting the amount of time spent in front of screens. You may also want to be mindful of the amount of time doing close work like reading or sewing.

Additional Information

Myopia occurs if the eyeball is too long or the cornea (the clear front cover of the eye) is too curved. As a result, the light entering the eye isn't focused correctly, and distant objects look blurred. Myopia affects nearly 30% of the U.S. population. While the exact cause of myopia is unknown, there is significant evidence that many people inherit myopia, or at least the tendency to develop myopia. If one or both parents are nearsighted, there is an increased chance their children will be nearsighted. Even though the tendency to develop myopia may be inherited, its actual development may be affected by how a person uses his or her eyes. Individuals who spend considerable time reading, working at a computer, playing video games or doing other intense close visual work may be more likely to develop myopia. In fact, high levels of screen time on smart devices (i.e. looking at a smart phone) is associated with around a 30% higher risk of myopia and, when combined with excessive computer use, that risk rose to around 80%.

Causes & risk factors

Myopia may also occur due to environmental factors or other health problems:

* Some people may experience blurred distance vision only at night. With "night myopia," low light makes it difficult for the eyes to focus properly. Or the increased pupil size during dark conditions allows more peripheral, unfocused light rays to enter the eye.
* People who do an excessive amount of near-vision work may experience a false or "pseudo" myopia. Their blurred distance vision is caused by overuse of the eyes' focusing mechanism. After long periods of near work, their eyes are unable to refocus to see clearly in the distance. Clear distance vision usually returns after resting the eyes. However, constant visual stress may lead to a permanent reduction in distance vision over time.
* Symptoms of myopia may also be a sign of variations in blood sugar levels in people with diabetes or maybe an early indication of a developing cataract.

Symptoms

People with myopia can have difficulty clearly seeing a movie or TV screen, a whiteboard in school or while driving. Generally, myopia first occurs in school-age children. Because the eye continues to grow during childhood, it typically progresses until about age 20. However, myopia may also develop in adults due to visual stress or health conditions such as diabetes.

Diagnosis

Testing for myopia may use several procedures to measure how the eyes focus light and to determine the power of any optical lenses needed to correct the reduced vision. As part of the testing, you will identify letters on a distance chart. This test measures visual acuity, which is written as a fraction, such as 20/40. The top number of the fraction is the standard distance at which testing is performed (20 feet). The bottom number is the smallest letter size read. A person with 20/40 visual acuity would have to get within 20 feet to identify a letter that could be seen clearly at 40 feet in a "normal" eye. Normal distance visual acuity is 20/20, although many people have 20/15 (better) vision.

Using an instrument called a phoropter, a doctor of optometry places a series of lenses in front of your eyes and measures how they focus light using a handheld lighted instrument called a retinoscope. Or the doctor may choose to use an automated instrument that evaluates the focusing power of the eye. The power is then refined based on your responses to determine the lenses that allow the clearest vision. Your doctor can conduct this testing without using eye drops to determine how the eyes respond under normal seeing conditions.

In some cases, such as for patients who can't respond verbally or when some of the eye's focusing power may be hidden, a doctor may use eye drops. The eye drops temporarily keep the eyes from changing focus during testing. Using the information from these tests, along with the results of other tests of eye focusing and eye teaming, your doctor can determine if you have myopia. He or she will also determine the power of any lens correction needed to provide a clearer vision. Once testing is complete, your doctor can discuss treatment options.

Treatment

People with myopia have several options available to regain clear distance vision. They include:

* Eyeglasses. For most people with myopia, eyeglasses are the primary choice for correction. Depending on the amount of myopia, you may only need to wear glasses for certain activities, like watching a movie or driving a car. Or, if you are very nearsighted, you may need to wear them all the time. Generally, a single-vision lens is prescribed to provide clear vision at all distances. However, patients over age 40, or children and adults whose myopia is due to the stress of near vision work, may need a bifocal or progressive addition lens. These multifocal lenses provide different powers or strengths throughout the lens to allow for clear vision in the distance and up close.
* Contact lenses. For some individuals, contact lenses offer clearer vision and a wider field of view than eyeglasses. However, since contact lenses are worn directly on the eyes, they require proper evaluation and care to safeguard eye health.
* Ortho-k or CRT. Another option for treating myopia is orthokeratology (ortho-k), also known as corneal refractive therapy (CRT). In this nonsurgical procedure, you wear a series of specially designed rigid contact lenses to gradually reshape the curvature of your cornea, the front outer surface of the eye. The lenses place pressure on the cornea to flatten it. This changes how light entering the eye is focused. You wear the contact lenses for limited periods, such as overnight, and then remove them. People with mild myopia may be able to temporarily obtain clear vision for most of their daily activities.
* Laser procedures. Laser procedures such as LASIK (laser in situ keratomileusis) or PRK (photorefractive keratectomy) are also possible treatment options for myopia in adults. A laser beam of light reshapes the cornea by removing a small amount of corneal tissue. The amount of myopia that PRK or LASIK can correct is limited by the amount of corneal tissue that can be safely removed. In PRK, a laser removes a thin layer of tissue from the surface of the cornea in order to change its shape and refocus light entering the eye. LASIK removes tissue from the inner layers, but not from the surface, of the cornea. To do this, a section of the outer corneal surface is lifted and folded back to expose the inner tissue. A laser then removes the precise amount of corneal tissue needed to reshape the eye. Then, the flap of outer tissue is placed back in position to heal.
* Other refractive surgery procedures. People who are highly nearsighted or whose corneas are too thin for laser procedures may be able to have their myopia surgically corrected. A doctor may be able to implant small lenses with the desired optical correction in their eyes. The implant can be placed just in front of the natural lens (phakic intraocular lens implant), or the implant can replace the natural lens (clear lens extraction with intraocular lens implantation). This clear lens extraction procedure is similar to cataract surgery but occurs before a cataract is present.
* Vision therapy for people with stress-related myopia. Vision therapy is an option for people whose blurred distance vision is caused by a spasm of the muscles that control eye focusing. Various eye exercises can improve poor eye focusing ability and regain clear distance vision.

People with myopia have a variety of options to correct vision problems. A doctor of optometry will help select the treatment that best meets the visual and lifestyle needs of the patient.

Prevention

Children who are at high risk of progressive myopia (family history, early age of onset, and extended periods of near work) may benefit from treatment options that have been shown to reduce the progression of myopia. These treatments include the prescription of bifocal spectacle or contact lenses, orthokeratology, eye drops, or a combination of these. Because persons with high myopia are at a greater risk of developing cataracts, glaucoma and myopic macular degeneration, myopia management may help preserve eye health.

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#4 Jokes » Grape Jokes - II » Today 15:08:19

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Q: What did one grape say to another?
A: You've got appeal in bunches!
* * *
Q: What's the new definition of divine?
A: It's what da grapes grow on.
* * *
Q: What did the green grape say to the purple grape?
A: Breathe idoit breathe.
* * *
Q: Why did the grape stop in the middle of the road?
A: Because he ran out of juice.
* * *
Q: Why'd Mrs Grape leave her family?
A: She was tired of raisin kids!
* * *

#8 Re: Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » crème de la crème » Yesterday 18:16:42

2434) Tsung-Dao Lee

Gist:

Work

For a long time, physicists assumed that various symmetries characterized nature. In a kind of “mirror world” where right and left were reversed and matter was replaced by antimatter, the same physical laws would apply, they posited. The equality of these laws was questioned concerning the decay of certain elementary particles, however, in 1956 and Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen Ning Yang formulated a theory that the left-right symmetry law is violated by the weak interaction. Measurements of electrons’ direction of motion during a cobalt isotope’s beta decay confirmed this.

Summary

Tsung-Dao Lee (born November 24, 1926, Shanghai, China—died August 4, 2024, San Francisco, California, U.S.) was a Chinese-born American physicist who, with Chen Ning Yang, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1957 for work in discovering violations of the principle of parity conservation (the quality of space reflection symmetry of subatomic particle interactions), thus bringing about major refinements in particle physics theory.

In 1946 Lee was awarded a scholarship to study in the United States, and, although he had no undergraduate degree, he entered the graduate school in physics at the University of Chicago, where Enrico Fermi selected him as a doctoral student. After working briefly at the University of Chicago’s Yerkes Astronomical Observatory in Wisconsin, the University of California at Berkeley, and for two years with Yang at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, Lee was appointed assistant professor of physics at Columbia University in 1953.

In 1956 Lee and Yang concluded that the theta-meson and tau-meson, previously thought to be different because they decay by modes of differing parity, are in fact the same particle (now called the K-meson). Because the law of parity conservation prohibits a single particle from having decay modes exhibiting opposite parity, the only possible conclusion was that, for weak interactions at least, parity is not conserved. They suggested experiments to test their hypothesis, and in 1956–57 Chien-Shiung Wu, working at Columbia University, experimentally confirmed their theoretical conclusions.

In 1960 Lee was appointed professor of physics at the Institute for Advanced Study, and three years later he returned to Columbia to assume the first Enrico Fermi professorship in physics; he retired as professor emeritus in 2012. Beginning in 1964, he made important contributions to the explanation of the violations of time-reversal invariance, which occur during certain weak interactions.

Details

Tsung-Dao Lee (November 24, 1926 – August 4, 2024) was a Chinese-American physicist known for his work on parity violation, the Lee–Yang theorem, particle physics, relativistic heavy ion (RHIC) physics, nontopological solitons, and soliton stars. He was a university professor emeritus at Columbia University in New York City, where he taught from 1953 until his retirement in 2012.

In 1957, at the age of 30, Lee won the Nobel Prize in Physics with Chen Ning Yang for their work on the violation of the parity law in weak interactions, which Chien-Shiung Wu experimentally proved from 1956 to 1957, with her well known Wu experiment.

Lee remains the youngest Nobel laureate in the science fields after World War II. He is the third-youngest Nobel laureate in sciences in history after William L. Bragg (who won the prize at 25 with his father William H. Bragg in 1915) and Werner Heisenberg (who won in 1932 also at 30). Lee and Yang were the first Chinese laureates. Since he became a naturalized American citizen in 1963, Lee is also the youngest American ever to have won a Nobel Prize.

Biography:

Family

Lee was born in Shanghai, China, with his ancestral home in nearby Suzhou. His father Chun-kang Lee, one of the first graduates of the University of Nanking, was a chemical industrialist and merchant who was involved in China's early development of modern synthesized fertilizer. Lee's grandfather Chong-tan Lee was the first Chinese Methodist Episcopal senior pastor of St. John's Church in Suzhou [zh].

Lee had four brothers and one sister. Educator Robert C. T. Lee was one of T. D.'s brothers. Lee's mother Chang and brother Robert C. T. moved to Taiwan in the 1950s.

Early life

Lee received his secondary education in Shanghai (High School Affiliated to Soochow University) and Jiangxi (Jiangxi Joint High School). Due to the Second Sino-Japanese War, Lee's high school education was interrupted, thus he did not obtain his secondary diploma. Nevertheless, in 1943, Lee directly applied to and was admitted by the National Chekiang University (now Zhejiang University). Initially, Lee registered as a student in the Department of Chemical Engineering. Very quickly, Lee's talent was discovered and his interest in physics grew rapidly. Several physics professors, including Shu Xingbei and Wang Ganchang, largely guided Lee, and he soon transferred into the Department of Physics of National Che Kiang University, where he studied in 1943–1944.

However, again disrupted by a further Japanese invasion, Lee continued at the National Southwestern Associated University in Kunming the next year in 1945, where he studied with Professor Wu Ta-You.

Life and research in the U.S.

Professor Wu nominated Lee for a Chinese government fellowship for graduate study in the United States. In 1946, Lee went to the University of Chicago and was selected by Professor Enrico Fermi to become his PhD student. Lee received his PhD under Fermi in 1950 for his research work Hydrogen Content of White Dwarf Stars. Lee served as research associate and lecturer in physics at the University of California at Berkeley from 1950 to 1951.

In 1953, Lee joined Columbia University, where he remained until retirement. His first work at Columbia was on a solvable model of quantum field theory better known as the Lee model. Soon, his focus turned to particle physics and the developing puzzle of K meson decays. Lee realized in early 1956 that the key to the puzzle was parity non-conservation. At Lee's suggestion, the first experimental test was on hyperon decay by the Steinberger group. At that time, the experimental result gave only an indication of a 2 standard deviation effect of possible parity violation. Encouraged by this feasibility study, Lee made a systematic study of possible Time reversal (T), Parity (P), Charge Conjugation (C), and CP violations in weak interactions with collaborators, including C. N. Yang. After the definitive experimental confirmation by Chien-Shiung Wu and her assistants that showed that parity was not conserved, Lee and Yang were awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics. Wu was not awarded the Nobel prize, which is considered a notable controversy in Nobel committee history.

In the early 1960s, Lee and collaborators initiated the important field of high-energy neutrino physics. In 1964, Lee, with M. Nauenberg, analyzed the divergences connected with particles of zero rest mass, and described a general method known as the KLN theorem for dealing with these divergences, which still plays an important role in contemporary work in QCD, with its massless, self-interacting gluons. In 1974–75, Lee published several papers on "A New Form of Matter in High Density", which led to the modern field of RHIC physics, now dominating the entire high-energy nuclear physics field.

Besides particle physics, Lee was active in statistical mechanics, astrophysics, hydrodynamics, many body system, solid state, and lattice QCD. In 1983, Lee wrote a paper entitled, "Can Time Be a Discrete Dynamical Variable?"; which led to a series of publications by Lee and collaborators on the formulation of fundamental physics in terms of difference equations, but with exact invariance under continuous groups of translational and rotational transformations. Beginning in 1975, Lee and collaborators established the field of non-topological solitons, which led to his work on soliton stars and black holes throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

From 1997 to 2003, Lee was director of the RIKEN-BNL Research Center (now director emeritus), which together with other researchers from Columbia, completed a 1 teraflops supercomputer QCDSP for lattice QCD in 1998 and a 10 teraflops QCDOC machine in 2001. Leading up to 2005, Lee and Richard M. Friedberg developed a new method to solve the Schrödinger equation, leading to convergent iterative solutions for the long-standing quantum degenerate double-wall potential and other instanton problems. They also did work on the neutrino mapping matrix.

Lee was one of the 20 American recipients of the Nobel Prize in Physics to sign a letter addressed to President George W. Bush in May 2008, urging him to "reverse the damage done to basic science research in the Fiscal Year 2008 Omnibus Appropriations Bill" by requesting additional emergency funding for the Department of Energy's Office of Science, the National Science Foundation, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Educational activities

Soon after the re-establishment of China-American relations with the PRC, Lee and his wife, Jeannette Hui-Chun Chin, were able to go to the PRC, where Lee gave a series of lectures and seminars, and organized the CUSPEA (China-U.S. Physics Examination and Application).

In 1998, Lee established the Chun-Tsung Endowment ) in memory of his wife, who had died three years earlier. The Chun-Tsung scholarships, supervised by the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (New York), are awarded to undergraduates, usually in their 2nd or 3rd year, at six universities, which are Shanghai Jiaotong University, Fudan University, Lanzhou University, Soochow University, Peking University, and Tsinghua University. Students selected for such scholarships are named "Chun-Tsung Scholars".

Personal life and death

Lee and Jeannette Hui-Chun Chin married in 1950 and had two sons: James Lee and Stephen Lee. His wife died in 1996. James donated his father's Nobel Prize medal to Shanghai Jiao Tong University in 2014 where it is on display in the Tsung-Dao Lee Library.

Tsung-Dao Lee died in San Francisco on August 4, 2024, at the age of 97.

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#9 This is Cool » Nervous System » Yesterday 17:54:16

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Nervous System

Gist

The nervous system is the body's primary command center, controlling actions, sensory information, and involuntary functions by transmitting electrical signals between the brain, spinal cord, and body. Divided into the central (brain/spinal cord) and peripheral (nerves) systems, it enables movement, thought, memory, and, together with the endocrine system, maintains homeostasis.

Core Components

Central Nervous System (CNS): Comprises the brain and spinal cord, which act as the main processing center for information.
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): Consists of all nerves outside the brain and spinal cord, connecting the CNS to limbs and organs.
Neurons: The basic structural units (nerve cells) that send messages via electrical impulses, featuring axons for transmission and dendrites for reception.

Summary

In biology, the nervous system is the highly complex part of an animal that coordinates its actions and sensory information by transmitting signals to and from different parts of its body. The nervous system detects environmental changes that impact the body, then works in tandem with the endocrine system to respond to such events. Nervous tissue first arose in wormlike organisms about 550 to 600 million years ago. In vertebrates, it consists of two main parts, the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. The PNS consists mainly of nerves, which are enclosed bundles of the long fibers, or axons, that connect the CNS to every other part of the body. Nerves that transmit signals from the brain are called motor nerves (efferent), while those nerves that transmit information from the body to the CNS are called sensory nerves (afferent). The PNS is divided into two separate subsystems, the somatic and autonomic nervous systems. The autonomic nervous system is further subdivided into the sympathetic, parasympathetic and enteric nervous systems. The sympathetic nervous system is activated in cases of emergencies to mobilize energy, while the parasympathetic nervous system is activated when organisms are in a relaxed state. The enteric nervous system functions to control the gastrointestinal system. Nerves that exit from the brain are called cranial nerves while those exiting from the spinal cord are called spinal nerves.

The nervous system consists of nervous tissue which, at a cellular level, is defined by the presence of a special type of cell, called the neuron. Neurons have special structures that allow them to send signals rapidly and precisely to other cells. They send these signals in the form of electrochemical impulses traveling along thin fibers called axons, which can be directly transmitted to neighboring cells through electrical synapses or cause chemicals called neurotransmitters to be released at chemical synapses. A cell that receives a synaptic signal from a neuron may be excited, inhibited, or otherwise modulated. The connections between neurons can form neural pathways, neural circuits, and larger networks that generate an organism's perception of the world and determine its behavior. Along with neurons, the nervous system contains other specialized cells called glial cells (or simply glia), which provide structural and metabolic support. Many of the cells and vasculature channels within the nervous system make up the neurovascular unit, which regulates cerebral blood flow in order to rapidly satisfy the high energy demands of activated neurons.

Nervous systems are found in most multicellular animals, but vary greatly in complexity. The only multicellular animals that have no nervous system at all are sponges, placozoans, and mesozoans, which have very simple body plans. The nervous systems of the radially symmetric organisms ctenophores (comb jellies) and cnidarians (which include anemones, hydras, corals and jellyfish) consist of a diffuse nerve net. All other animal species, with the exception of a few types of worm, have a nervous system containing a brain, a central cord (or two cords running in parallel), and nerves radiating from the brain and central cord. The size of the nervous system ranges from a few hundred cells in the simplest worms, to around 300 billion cells in African elephants.

The central nervous system functions to send signals from one cell to others, or from one part of the body to others and to receive feedback. Malfunction of the nervous system can occur as a result of genetic defects, physical damage due to trauma or toxicity, infection, or simply senescence. The medical specialty of neurology studies disorders of the nervous system and looks for interventions that can prevent or treat them. In the peripheral nervous system, the most common problem is the failure of nerve conduction, which can be due to different causes including diabetic neuropathy and demyelinating disorders such as multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Neuroscience is the field of science that focuses on the study of the nervous system.

Details

Your nervous system plays a role in everything you do. The three main parts of your nervous system are your brain, spinal cord and nerves. It helps you move, think and feel. It even regulates the things you do but don’t think about like digestion. It contains the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system.

Overview:

What is the nervous system?

Your nervous system is your body’s command center. It’s made up of your brain, spinal cord and nerves. Your nervous system works by sending messages, or electrical signals, between your brain and all the other parts of your body. These signals tell you to breathe, move, speak and see, for example. Your nervous system keeps track of what’s going on inside and outside of your body and decides how to respond to any situation you’re in.

Your nervous system regulates complicated processes like thoughts and memory. It also plays an essential role in the things your body does without thinking, like blushing, sweating and blinking.

Function:

What does the nervous system do?

Your nervous system’s main function is to send messages from various parts of your body to your brain, and from your brain back out to your body to tell your body what to do. These messages regulate your:

* Thoughts, memory, learning and feelings.
* Movements (balance and coordination).
* Senses (how your brain interprets what you see, hear, taste, touch and feel).
* Wound healing.
* Sleep.
* Heartbeat and breathing patterns.
* Response to stressful situations, including sweat production.
* Digestion.
* Body processes, such as puberty and aging.

How does the nervous system work?

Your nervous system uses nerve cells called neurons to send signals, or messages, all over your body. These electrical signals travel among your brain, skin, organs, glands and muscles.

The messages help you move your limbs and feel sensations, like pain. Your eyes, ears, tongue, nose and the nerves all over your body take in information about your environment. Then, nerves carry that data to and from your brain.

There are different types of neurons. Each type of neuron has a different job:

* Motor neurons take signals from your brain and spinal cord to your muscles. They help you move. They also assist with breathing, swallowing and speaking.
* Sensory neurons take information from your senses (what you see, touch, taste, etc.) to your brain.
* Interneurons communicate between motor and sensory neurons. These neurons regulate your movement in response to sensory information (like moving away from a hot surface) and play a role in how you learn, think and remember.

Anatomy:

What are the parts of the nervous system?

The nervous system has two main parts:

* Central nervous system (CNS): Your brain and spinal cord make up your CNS. Your brain reads signals from your nerves to regulate how you think, move and feel.
* Peripheral nervous system (PNS): Your PNS is made up of a network of nerves. The nerves branch out from your spinal cord. This system relays information from your brain and spinal cord to your organs, arms, legs, fingers and toes.

There are two parts to your peripheral nervous system:

*The somatic nervous system guides your voluntary movements.
* The autonomic nervous system regulates the activities you do without thinking about them (involuntary movements).

What does the nervous system look like?

Nerve cells (neurons) are the basis of your nervous system. There are 100 billion neurons in your brain. These cells connect throughout your entire body.

Imagine your nervous system as a tree. Your central nervous system is the trunk of the tree that contains your brain and spinal cord. The tree branches are your peripheral nervous system (nerves). The branches extend from the truck (brain and spinal cord) to reach all parts of your body.

Conditions and Disorders:

What are common conditions or disorders that affect the nervous system?

There are many conditions that affect your nervous system. Some of the most common include:

* Alzheimer’s disease.
* Cancer.
* Cerebral palsy.
* Epilepsy.
* Huntington’s disease.
* Infection (meningitis).
* Parkinson’s disease.
* Stroke.
* Traumatic brain injury.

What are common signs or symptoms of nervous system conditions?

Signs and symptoms of nervous system conditions vary by type but may include:

* Movement and coordination changes.
* Memory loss.
* Pain, numbness or a pins and needles feeling.
* Behavioral and mood changes.
* Difficulty with thinking and reasoning.
* Seizures.

Some conditions, like a stroke, are medical emergencies that need treatment quickly. If you notice the following symptoms, contact 911 or your local emergency services number:

* Muscle weakness or paralysis in one side of your body.
* Sudden vision loss.
* Slurred speech.
* Confusion.

What tests check the health of your nervous system?

A healthcare provider may use one of the following tests to check the health of your nervous system:

* Computed tomography (CT) scan.
* Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG).
* Electroencephalogram (EEG).
* Lumbar puncture (spinal tap).
* Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.

How are conditions that affect the nervous system treated?

A healthcare provider will review your symptoms to diagnose and treat any conditions that affect your nervous system. Treatment varies for each condition. So, your healthcare provider will take into consideration several factors, like your age and general health, to create your treatment plan. This plan may include:

* Taking medications.
* Having surgery.
* Participating in counseling for mental and emotional support.
* Receiving supportive care (to keep you comfortable).

Additional Information:

Key Facts

* The nervous system is made up of the brain, spinal cord and nerves.
* The nervous system is responsible for intelligence, learning, memory, movement, the senses and basic body functions such as your heartbeat and breathing.
* The basic building blocks of the nervous system are the nerve cells (neurons) which are responsible for carrying messages to and from different parts of the body.
* The brain is in constant communication with all parts of the body, sending instructions and receiving input from the senses.

What is the nervous system?

The nervous system is made up of the brain, spinal cord and nerves.

It controls many aspects of what you think, how you feel and what your body does. It allows you to do things such as walk, speak, swallow, breathe and learn. It also controls how the body reacts in stressful situations. The nervous system interprets and responds to information gathered through the senses.

What is function of the nervous system?

The main function of the nervous system is to be the body's communication network. Its main job is to send and receive messages between you and the outside world, and within your own body.

The nervous system is responsible for:

* intelligence, learning and memory: your thoughts and feelings
* physical movement
* basic body functions such as the beating of your heart, breathing, digestion, sweating and shivering
* the senses: sight, hearing, taste, touch and smell

What are the parts of the nervous system?

The nervous system is made up of:

* the central nervous system (CNS), which consists of the brain and spinal cord
* the peripheral nervous system (PNS), which consists of nerves that connect the CNS to the rest of the body

The brain is made up of different parts. These include the:

* cerebrum
* cerebellum
* thalamus
* hypothalamus
* brainstem

The brain's cerebral cortex is the outermost layer of the brain that gives the brain its wrinkly appearance. The cerebral cortex is divided in half lengthways into two sides or hemispheres, the left hemisphere, and the right hemisphere. Each hemisphere specialises in different functions, but they share information and work together seamlessly.

Each brain hemisphere (parts of the cerebrum) has 4 different sections called lobes. These lobes are the frontal, parietal, temporal and occipital lobes. Each lobe carries out different brain functions.

Learn more about the structure of the central nervous system and how it works.

What are nerve cells?

The basic building blocks of the nervous system are the nerve cells, or neurons. The human brain has around 100 billion neurons. These cells are responsible for carrying messages to and from different parts of the body.

Neurons have a cell body which contain the cell's nucleus as well as special extension called dendrites and axons.

The synapse is the gap between the end of one neuron's axon and the tip of next neuron's dendrites. Messages travel from one neuron to the next across synapses.

A neuron and it's parts.

How does the nervous system work?

The brain is in constant communication with all parts of the body, sending instructions and receiving input from the senses.

Outgoing messages from the brain are sent along motor pathways, which carry messages from the brain to the muscles to tell them to move. The neurons that make up these motor pathways are called motor neurons.

Incoming messages from the body to the brain are sent along sensory pathways. The sensory pathways detect things such as light and sound and carry information about these to the brain. The neurons that make up these sensory pathways are called sensory neurons.

The spinal cord carries motor and sensory signals between the brain and nerves. The spinal cord also contains separate circuits for many reflexes.

One part of the nervous system, called the autonomic nervous system, controls a lot of the body processes that function automatically, for example, breathing, sweating or shivering.

There are 2 parts to the autonomic nervous system:

* the sympathetic nervous system, which controls how you respond in an emergency or when you are under stress (for example, it makes your heart beat faster and causes you to release adrenaline)
* the parasympathetic nervous system, which prepares the body for rest

These parts work together to manage how the body responds to your changing environment and needs. For example, your pupils change size to allow the right amount of light into your eyes to allow effective vision.

What medical conditions are related to the nervous system?

There are thousands of conditions that start in or affect the central nervous system, including:

* degenerative conditions such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis
* stroke
* seizure disorders, such as epilepsy
* cancer, such as brain tumours
* infections, such as meningitis
* brain injuries and spinal cord injuries
* spinal cord compression (spinal stenosis)

What are the symptoms of problems with the nervous system?

There are many different symptoms that could suggest a problem with the nervous system. They include:

* headaches
* blurry vision
* fatigue
* leg or arm numbness
* loss of coordination, weakness or loss of muscle strength
* slurred speech
* tremors

Other symptoms that might suggest a problem with the central nervous system include:

* emotional problems
* memory loss
* behavioural changes

There are also many diseases that affect the peripheral nervous system. The peripheral nerves include the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord such as nerves of the face, arms, legs and torso. Read more on diseases of the peripheral nervous system.

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#10 Re: This is Cool » Miscellany » Yesterday 17:07:16

2496) Oceanography

Gist

Oceanography, or marine science, is the interdisciplinary study of the world's oceans, covering 70% of Earth's surface. It integrates biology, chemistry, physics, and geology to examine marine life, ocean currents, seafloor structure, and chemical properties. Key branches include physical, chemical, geological, and biological oceanography, which are vital for understanding climate regulation, marine ecosystems, and resources.

Oceanography is the interdisciplinary study of the ocean, covering its physical, chemical, biological, and geological aspects, from marine life and currents to seafloor geology and its role in climate. It combines fields like biology, chemistry, physics, and geology to understand ocean processes, ecosystems, and the impact of human activities, using tools like research vessels, underwater vehicles, and satellites to explore the 70% of Earth covered by water.

Summary

Oceanography is a scientific discipline concerned with all aspects of the world’s oceans and seas, including their physical and chemical properties, their origin and geologic framework, and the life forms that inhabit the marine environment.

A brief treatment of oceanography follows.

Traditionally, oceanography has been divided into four separate but related branches: physical oceanography, chemical oceanography, marine geology, and marine ecology. Physical oceanography deals with the properties of seawater (temperature, density, pressure, and so on), its movement (waves, currents, and tides), and the interactions between the ocean waters and the atmosphere. Chemical oceanography has to do with the composition of seawater and the biogeochemical cycles that affect it. Marine geology focuses on the structure, features, and evolution of the ocean basins. Marine ecology, also called biological oceanography, involves the study of the plants and animals of the sea, including life cycles and food production.

Oceanography is the sum of these several branches. Oceanographic research entails the sampling of seawater and marine life for close study, the remote sensing of oceanic processes with aircraft and Earth-orbiting satellites, and the exploration of the seafloor by means of deep-sea drilling and seismic profiling of the terrestrial crust below the ocean bottom. Greater knowledge of the world’s oceans enables scientists to more accurately predict, for example, long-term weather and climatic changes and also leads to more efficient exploitation of the Earth’s resources. Oceanography also is vital to understanding the effect of pollutants on ocean waters and to the preservation of the quality of the oceans’ waters in the face of increasing human demands made on them.

Details

Oceanography, also known as oceanology, sea science, ocean science, and marine science, is the scientific study of the ocean, including its physics, chemistry, biology, and geology.

It is an Earth science, which covers a wide range of topics, including ocean currents, waves, and geophysical fluid dynamics; fluxes of various chemical substances and physical properties within the ocean and across its boundaries; ecosystem dynamics; and plate tectonics and seabed geology.

Oceanographers draw upon a wide range of disciplines to deepen their understanding of the world’s oceans, incorporating insights from astronomy, biology, chemistry, geography, geology, hydrology, meteorology and physics.

Modern oceanography

Knowledge of the oceans remained confined to the topmost few fathoms of the water and a small amount of the bottom, mainly in shallow areas. Almost nothing was known of the ocean depths. The British Royal Navy's efforts to chart all of the world's coastlines in the mid-19th century reinforced the vague idea that most of the ocean was very deep, although little more was known. As exploration ignited both popular and scientific interest in the polar regions and Africa, so too did the mysteries of the unexplored oceans.

The seminal event in the founding of the modern science of oceanography was the 1872–1876 Challenger expedition. As the first true oceanographic cruise, this expedition laid the groundwork for an entire academic and research discipline. In response to a recommendation from the Royal Society, the British Government announced in 1871 an expedition to explore world's oceans and conduct appropriate scientific investigation. Charles Wyville Thomson and Sir John Murray launched the Challenger expedition. Challenger, leased from the Royal Navy, was modified for scientific work and equipped with separate laboratories for natural history and chemistry. Under the scientific supervision of Thomson, Challenger travelled nearly 70,000 nautical miles (130,000 km) surveying and exploring. On her journey circumnavigating the globe, 492 deep sea soundings, 133 bottom dredges, 151 open water trawls and 263 serial water temperature observations were taken. Around 4,700 new species of marine life were discovered. The result was the Report Of The Scientific Results of the Exploring Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger during the years 1873–76. Murray, who supervised the publication, described the report as "the greatest advance in the knowledge of our planet since the celebrated discoveries of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries". He went on to found the academic discipline of oceanography at the University of Edinburgh, which remained the centre for oceanographic research well into the 20th century. Murray was the first to study marine trenches and in particular the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and map the sedimentary deposits in the oceans. He tried to map out the world's ocean currents based on salinity and temperature observations, and was the first to correctly understand the nature of coral reef development.

In the late 19th century, other Western nations also sent out scientific expeditions (as did private individuals and institutions). The first purpose-built oceanographic ship, Albatros, was built in 1882. In 1893, Fridtjof Nansen allowed his ship, Fram, to be frozen in the Arctic ice. This enabled him to obtain oceanographic, meteorological and astronomical data at a stationary spot over an extended period.

In 1881 the geographer John Francon Williams published a seminal book, Geography of the Oceans. Between 1907 and 1911 Otto Krümmel published the Handbuch der Ozeanographie, which became influential in awakening public interest in oceanography. The four-month 1910 North Atlantic expedition headed by John Murray and Johan Hjort was the most ambitious research oceanographic and marine zoological project ever mounted until then, and led to the classic 1912 book The Depths of the Ocean.

The first acoustic measurement of sea depth was made in 1914. Between 1925 and 1927 the "Meteor" expedition gathered 70,000 ocean depth measurements using an echo sounder, surveying the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

In 1934, Easter Ellen Cupp, the first woman to have earned a PhD (at Scripps) in the United States, completed a major work on diatoms that remained the standard taxonomy in the field until well after her death in 1999. In 1940, Cupp was let go from her position at Scripps. Sverdrup specifically commended Cupp as a conscientious and industrious worker and commented that his decision was no reflection on her ability as a scientist. Sverdrup used the instructor billet vacated by Cupp to employ Marston Sargent, a biologist studying marine algae, which was not a new research program at Scripps. Financial pressures did not prevent Sverdrup from retaining the services of two other young post-doctoral students, Walter Munk and Roger Revelle. Cupp's partner, Dorothy Rosenbury, found her a position teaching high school, where she remained for the rest of her career.

Sverdrup, Johnson and Fleming published The Oceans in 1942, which was a major landmark. The Sea (in three volumes, covering physical oceanography, seawater and geology) edited by M.N. Hill was published in 1962, while Rhodes Fairbridge's Encyclopedia of Oceanography was published in 1966.

The Great Global Rift, running along the Mid Atlantic Ridge, was discovered by Maurice Ewing and Bruce Heezen in 1953 and mapped by Heezen and Marie Tharp using bathymetric data; in 1954 a mountain range under the Arctic Ocean was found by the Arctic Institute of the USSR. The theory of seafloor spreading was developed in 1960 by Harry Hammond Hess. The Ocean Drilling Program started in 1966. Deep-sea vents were discovered in 1977 by Jack Corliss and Robert Ballard in the submersible DSV Alvin.

In the 1950s, Auguste Piccard invented the bathyscaphe and used the bathyscaphe Trieste to investigate the ocean's depths. The United States nuclear submarine Nautilus made the first journey under the ice to the North Pole in 1958. In 1962 the FLIP (Floating Instrument Platform), a 355-foot (108 m) spar buoy, was first deployed.

In 1968, Tanya Atwater led the first all-woman oceanographic expedition. Until that time, gender policies restricted women oceanographers from participating in voyages to a significant extent.

From the 1970s, there has been much emphasis on the application of large scale computers to oceanography to allow numerical predictions of ocean conditions and as a part of overall environmental change prediction. Early techniques included analog computers (such as the Ishiguro Storm Surge Computer) generally now replaced by numerical methods (e.g. SLOSH.) An oceanographic buoy array was established in the Pacific to allow prediction of El Niño events.

1990 saw the start of the World Ocean Circulation Experiment (WOCE) which continued until 2002. Geosat seafloor mapping data became available in 1995.

Study of the oceans is critical to understanding shifts in Earth's energy balance along with related global and regional changes in climate, the biosphere and biogeochemistry. The atmosphere and ocean are linked because of evaporation and precipitation as well as thermal flux (and solar insolation). Recent studies have advanced knowledge on ocean acidification, ocean heat content, ocean currents, sea level rise, the oceanic carbon cycle, the water cycle, Arctic sea ice decline, coral bleaching, marine heatwaves, extreme weather, coastal erosion and many other phenomena in regards to ongoing climate change and climate feedbacks.

In general, understanding the world ocean through further scientific study enables better stewardship and sustainable utilization of Earth's resources. The Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission reports that 1.7% of the total national research expenditure of its members is focused on ocean science.

Additional Information

Oceanography is an interdisciplinary science where math, physics, chemistry, biology and geology intersect.

Traditionally, we discuss oceanography in terms of four separate but related branches: physical oceanography, chemical oceanography, biological oceanography and geological oceanography.

Physical oceanography involves the study of the properties (temperature, density, etc.) and movement (waves, currents, and tides) of seawater and the interaction between the ocean and the atmosphere.

Chemical oceanography involves the study of the composition of seawater and the biogeochemical cycles that affect it.

Biological oceanography involves the study of the biological organisms in the ocean (including life cycles and food production) such as bacteria, phytoplankton, zooplankton and extending to the more traditional marine biology focus of fish and marine mammals.

Geological oceanography focuses on the structure, features, and evolution of the ocean basins.

Oceanography is greater than the sum of these specific branches. Oceanographers use a variety of tools to study the ocean, and many of these studies involve more than one branch. Oceanographers collect discrete water, sediment and biological samples using ships (Research Vessels). They deploy autonomous sampling systems such as buoys and gliders to collect data over time and space scales that cannot be done with a ship. Remote sensing from aircraft and satellites allows oceanographers to get a global view of some parameters. Modeling allows oceanographers to look at the past and predict the future state of the ocean (e.g circulation, air-sea interactions, sustainability of fisheries, quality of water, etc.).

The knowledge gained from all of these types of measurements allows oceanographers to do many things including, but not limited to:

* better predict (using models) changes in weather and climate improve the forecast for hazards; natural (e.g. hurricanes) or man-made (e.g. oil spills)
* assess the impact of pollutants on the quality of water in the ocean
* protect the quality of the water in the ocean in the face of increasing human demands (e.g. fisheries, tourism, shipping, offshore oil & gas, offshore wind farms, etc.).

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#11 Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » Come Quotes - IV » Yesterday 16:38:49

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Come Quotes - IV

1. If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack. - Winston Churchill

2. There will be no end to the troubles of states, or of humanity itself, till philosophers become kings in this world, or till those we now call kings and rulers really and truly become philosophers, and political power and philosophy thus come into the same hands. - Plato

3. With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come. - William Shakespeare

4. Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame! - William Butler Yeats

5. The automobile engine will come, and then I will consider my life's work complete. - Rudolf Diesel

6. It is very important to generate a good attitude, a good heart, as much as possible. From this, happiness in both the short term and the long term for both yourself and others will come. - Dalai Lama

7. Let us endeavor so to live so that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry. - Mark Twain

8. Nothing brings me more happiness than trying to help the most vulnerable people in society. It is a goal and an essential part of my life - a kind of destiny. Whoever is in distress can call on me. I will come running wherever they are. - Princess Diana.

#12 Jokes » Grape Jokes - I » Yesterday 16:21:41

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Q: What did the green grape say to the purple grape?
A: Breathe! Breathe!
* * *
Q: Why aren't grapes ever lonely?
A: Because they come in bunches!
* * *
Q: What is purple and long?
A: The grape wall of China.
* * *
Q: What did the grape say when he got stepped on?
A: He let out a little wine.
* * *
Q: "What's purple and huge and swims in the ocean?"
A: "Moby Grape."
* * *

#13 Science HQ » Oscillator » Yesterday 16:13:20

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Oscillator

Gist

An oscillator is an electronic circuit that converts DC (Direct Current) into a periodic, repeating AC (Alternating Current) signal—such as a sine, square, or triangle wave—without needing an external input signal. These devices are essential for generating, timing, and controlling frequencies in systems like radio, clocks, computers, and sensors.

Oscillators are fundamental in electronics, generating precise frequencies for applications like clocks in computers, carrier waves in radios & Wi-Fi, and timing signals in microcontrollers, enabling everything from timekeeping (watches) to data synchronization (Bluetooth) and medical devices (ultrasound), acting as versatile signal generators for diverse needs. 

Summary

An electronic oscillator is an electronic circuit that produces a periodic, oscillating or alternating current (AC) signal, usually a sine wave, square wave or a triangle wave, powered by a direct current (DC) source. Oscillators are found in many electronic devices, such as radio receivers, television sets, radio and television broadcast transmitters, computers, computer peripherals, cellphones, radar, and many other devices.

Oscillators are often characterized by the frequency of their output signal:

* A low-frequency oscillator (LFO) is an oscillator that generates a frequency below approximately 20 Hz. This term is typically used in the field of audio synthesizers, to distinguish it from an audio frequency oscillator.
* An audio oscillator produces frequencies in the audio range, 20 Hz to 20 kHz.
* A radio frequency (RF) oscillator produces signals above the audio range, more generally in the range of 100 kHz to 100 GHz.

There are two general types of electronic oscillators: the linear or harmonic oscillator, and the nonlinear or relaxation oscillator. The two types are fundamentally different in how oscillation is produced, as well as in the characteristic type of output signal that is generated.

The most-common linear oscillator in use is the crystal oscillator, in which the output frequency is controlled by a piezo-electric resonator consisting of a vibrating quartz crystal. Crystal oscillators are ubiquitous in modern electronics, being the source for the clock signal in computers and digital watches, as well as a source for the signals generated in radio transmitters and receivers. As a crystal oscillator's “native” output waveform is sinusoidal, a signal-conditioning circuit may be used to convert the output to other waveform types, such as the square wave typically utilized in computer clock circuits.

Details

Oscillators are essential components in the world of electronics, playing a crucial role in generating periodic signals. From the simplest applications to complex systems, oscillators provide the timing signals needed for synchronization and control. This article explains what oscillators are and how they work, explores the various types and their performance characteristics, highlights their applications across industries, and reviews recent advancements in this essential technology.

What is an Oscillator?

An oscillator is an electronic circuit that produces a continuous, periodic signal - typically in the form of a sine wave, square wave, or triangle wave - without requiring an input signal. These signals are defined by their frequency and amplitude, which can be precisely controlled to suit specific applications. In essence, an oscillator converts energy from a DC power supply into an AC signal.

Oscillators are found in a wide array of devices, including clocks, radios, and computers. They are considered the heartbeat of electronic systems, serving as timing references that enable circuits to synchronize and function properly.

What is an Oscillator in a CPU?

A CPU oscillator is responsible for generating clock signals that regulate the timing and speed of the processor. These clock signals synchronize various CPU components, allowing for the coordinated execution of instructions.

Typically, a crystal oscillator is used, which relies on the mechanical resonance of a vibrating quartz crystal to produce a stable frequency. This precise timing is critical to a CPU’s performance and efficiency, as it directly affects the instruction execution rate.

How Do Oscillators Work?

Oscillators generate a continuous, periodic signal - such as a sine wave or square wave - without requiring an input signal of the same frequency. They achieve this through the combined principles of feedback and resonance.

Basic Components

• Amplifier: Boosts the signal.

• Feedback Network: Determines the frequency of oscillation.

• Energy Source: Supplies power to sustain the oscillation.

The system continuously feeds part of its output back to the input, allowing the signal to regenerate itself. The frequency of oscillation depends on the configuration of components such as resistors, capacitors, and inductors within the feedback loop.

Purpose of an Oscillator

The primary purpose of an oscillator is to generate consistent clock signals that control the timing and synchronization of electronic systems, especially CPUs. These signals are essential for ensuring the coordinated execution of instructions, which in turn impacts overall system performance.

Types of Oscillators:

What is an oscillator? And what are the types of oscillators?

Oscillators, essential components in electronic circuits, can be categorized based on the type of waveform they produce and their method of operation. These components are generally divided into two main categories.

Relaxation vs Linear Oscillators

Relaxation Oscillators: Produce non-sinusoidal waveforms such as sawtooth or square waves.

Linear Oscillators: Generate sinusoidal waveforms.

Specific Types

Crystal Oscillators: Crystal oscillators are linear oscillators, and use quartz crystals to generate precise frequencies. Known for their stability and accuracy, they are ideal for communication devices and clocks.

RC Oscillators: RC oscillators can be both relaxation oscillators and linear oscillators. These oscillators utilize resistors and capacitors to generate sine or square waves. Often used in audio applications due to their simplicity and cost-effectiveness.

LC Oscillators: LC oscillators are considered linear oscillators and use inductors (L) and capacitors (C) to produce oscillations. Typically employed in radio frequency (RF) applications due to their high-frequency capability.

Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) Oscillators: PLL oscillators are primarily considered linear oscillators and are used for frequency synthesis and modulation. Essential in telecommunications for signal processing and frequency control.

Emerging Oscillator Technologies

Recent advancements in oscillator technology focus on performance improvement, miniaturization, and integration with other electronic components.

MEMS Oscillators: Microelectromechanical systems offer smaller form factors, highly stable reference frequencies, and low power consumption - ideal for portable devices.

Programmable Oscillators: Allow for customized frequency outputs, reducing component count and streamlining the design process.

Devices That Use Oscillators

Many electronic devices rely on oscillators for essential functions like timing, signal generation, and frequency control. Their ability to produce consistent waveforms makes them indispensable in both consumer electronics and industrial systems.

Examples:

Quartz Watches: Use crystal oscillators to generate highly accurate timekeeping signals, ensuring the watch maintains precise seconds, minutes, and hours.

Radios: Rely on oscillators to generate carrier frequencies and to tune into specific broadcast channels for both AM and FM signals.

Computers: Employ oscillators in their system clocks to synchronize processor operations, manage data transfer, and maintain stable performance.

Cellphones: Utilize oscillators for network synchronization, frequency hopping in wireless communication, and internal clocking for processors and sensors.

Radar Systems: Depend on high-frequency oscillators to generate the radio waves that detect and measure the speed, range, and position of objects.

Metal Detectors: Use oscillators to produce electromagnetic fields that interact with metallic objects, enabling detection through changes in oscillation frequency or amplitude.

Performance Characteristics of Oscillators

Oscillators are evaluated based on several performance metrics that directly influence their suitability for specific applications. The three most critical are frequency stability, phase noise, and waveform shape.

Frequency Stability

Frequency stability describes an oscillator’s ability to maintain its output frequency under varying conditions over time.

• Short-Term Stability: Covers rapid variations over seconds or minutes, often caused by noise or small environmental changes.
• Long-Term Stability: Considers changes over hours, days, or years, typically influenced by component aging and gradual environmental shifts.
• Environmental Factors: Temperature fluctuations, supply voltage changes, and mechanical vibrations can affect stability.
• Crystal Oscillators: These oscillators excel in this area because the resonant frequency of a quartz crystal is highly resistant to such disturbances, making them ideal for precision timing applications like GPS, telecommunications, and laboratory measurement systems.

Phase Noise

Phase noise measures short-term, rapid fluctuations in the oscillator's phase, which manifest as small, random deviations from the ideal frequency.

• It is usually represented as a power density (dBc/Hz) at a given frequency offset from the carrier signal.
• Low Phase Noise: Essential in high-performance systems, such as satellite communications, radar, and high-speed data links, where timing jitter can degrade system performance or cause data errors.
• High Phase Noise: Can lead to signal distortion, reduced sensitivity in receivers, and degraded performance in frequency synthesizers.

Waveform Shape

The oscillator’s output waveform determines how well it interfaces with downstream circuitry.

• Sine Waves: Preferred in RF applications because they have minimal harmonic content, reducing the need for filtering.
• Square Waves: Common in digital clocking applications, as their fast transitions make it easy for digital circuits to detect logic states.
• Sawtooth or Triangular Waveforms: May be required in specialized systems, such as sweep generators in analog oscilloscopes.
• Poor Waveform Shape: Can cause signal integrity issues, increased electromagnetic interference (EMI), or inaccurate timing in digital circuits.

Are Oscillators Active Components?

Oscillators are classified as active components. They amplify electrical signals and generate power, distinguishing them from passive components like resistors and capacitors. While oscillators incorporate passive elements in their circuits, their role in signal generation qualifies them as active devices.

Industries That Use Oscillators

Oscillators' ability to generate stable, precise signals makes them indispensable for timing, synchronization, and frequency control across a wide range of sectors. The specific oscillator type used often depends on the application's demands - whether it’s ultra-high precision, rugged durability, or low power consumption.

Telecommunications: Oscillators generate carrier signals for data transmission. Their stability and accuracy ensure signal integrity over long distances. Crystal and PLL oscillators are widely used here.

Consumer Electronics: Devices like smartphones and TVs rely on oscillators to generate clock signals for microcontrollers. Their precision directly impacts device performance.

Automotive: Used in engine control units, infotainment systems, and sensor applications (e.g., ABS), oscillators regulate timing for ignition and fuel injection.

Medical Devices: Essential in pacemakers and diagnostic tools, where reliability and precision are critical. Crystal oscillators are often chosen for their long-term stability.

Additional Information

An oscillator is an electronic device that produces repetitive oscillating signals in the form of a sine wave, a square wave, or a triangle wave. Basically, this circuit converts DC (Direct Current) into an AC (Alternating Current) signal at a specific frequency.

An oscillator is essential in various electronic devices. It is used in Bluetooth modules for frequency generation and maintaining a stable connection. In relays, oscillators help with debouncing and pulse generation.

In sensors, they are used for generating carrier signals and stabilizing readings. Integrated circuits (ICs) use oscillators for clock generation and data synchronization. In connectors, oscillators assist with signal integrity and timing matching.

Microcontrollers rely on oscillators for peripheral operation and system clock management. Additionally, oscillators are used in LCD and LED displays for backlight control and data driving.

A basic oscillator circuit typically includes components like an amplifier stage, a feedback network, frequency-determining components, and a power supply.

1. Amplifier

An amplifier in an oscillator can be a transistor, an operational amplifier, or any active device that boosts small signals to maintain continuous oscillations. For that amplifier must provide a gain greater than or equal to one to sustain oscillations.

2. Feedback Network

In this network, it feeds a portion of the output back to the input with the correct phase. This network includes components like capacitive, inductive, or resistive networks like LC circuits or RC circuits.

3. Frequency Determining Components

This component sets the frequency at which the oscillator operates, which includes RC networks, LC networks, and crystal resonators.

4. Power Supply

It provides the necessary voltage and current for operation.

Types of Oscillators

Based on the design, frequency range, and application, oscillators are classified into various types. They are as follows:

1. LC Oscillator

An LC oscillator uses an inductor and a capacitor to determine the frequency of oscillation. It is a high-frequency operation oscillator that gives a smooth sine wave output, and its frequency depends on the values of L and C.

LC oscillator consists of different types like Hartley Oscillator (uses a tapped inductor), Colpitts Oscillator (uses a capacitive voltage divider), and Clapp Oscillator ( it is a variation of the Colpitts with an additional capacitor for better frequency stability.

It is mostly used in radio transmitters, RF communication circuits, and signal generators.

2. RC Oscillator

RC oscillator uses resistors and capacitors to produce oscillations. It produces stable low-frequency sine waves and is ideal for audio frequency generation, which is cost cost-effective design.

This includes the Wien bridge oscillator (for audio applications) and the Phase shift oscillator (produces sine waves using multiple RC stages). RC oscillators are used in audio signal generation, function generation, and low-frequency timing circuits.

3. Crystal Oscillator

To create a very stable frequency oscillation, a crystal oscillator uses the mechanical resonance of a quartz crystal. It generates a pure sine wave output with extremely high frequency stability. They have very low frequency drift due to temperature changes.

These are of the types Pierce oscillator and AT-cut crystal oscillator (widely used in microcontrollers). It is used in microcontrollers and microprocessors, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi modules, digital watches and clocks, and GPS systems.

Working Principle of Oscillator

The working principle of an oscillator is based on the concept of positive feedback and energy conversion from a direct current (DC) source into an alternating current (AC) signal at a specific, stable frequency.

The working of the oscillator is explained in step below:

1. Initial

Due to thermal activity, every electronic circuit has inherent noise, and this tiny noise signal acts as the seed for oscillation.

2. Amplification

At the amplification stage, the amplifier boosts this initial noise signal, and amplification must be sufficient to compensate for any losses in the feedback network.

3. Positive Feedback Loop

A portion of the output is fed back to the input in phase, which reinforces the input signal rather than cancelling it.

4. Frequency Selection

The frequency-determining network (RC, LC, or crystal) controls the frequency of oscillation.

5. Steady State Oscillation

As the feedback sustains the oscillations, the amplitude stabilizes. Non-linear effects or amplitude limiting mechanisms prevent the output from growing indefinitely, ensuring stable oscillations.

Applications of Oscillators

1. Communication Systems

* Oscillators generate high-frequency carrier signals for AM, FM, and digital modulation.
* Used to produce a range of frequencies from a single oscillator source.
* LC and crystal oscillators are used for tuning and frequency control.

Example: Radio Transmitters, Mobile phones, Wi-Fi modules, Bluetooth devices

2. Microcontrollers and Microprocessors

* Oscillators provide the clock signals needed for the timing and operation of microcontrollers and microprocessors.
* Crystal oscillators generate precise timing signals that ensure all processes operate in harmony and within correct timing constraints.

Example: Arduino boards, PIC microcontrollers, Embedded systems.

3. Sensors

* Oscillators are used in sensor circuits for data acquisition and signal processing.

Example: Proximity sensors, Ultrasonic sensors, and Environmental monitoring systems.

4. Display Technologies

Oscillators help maintain the refresh rate of digital displays. Used in the PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) circuits for adjusting display brightness.

Example: LED displays, LCD displays, OLED panels, Digital signage.

Frequently Asked Questions:

1. Is an Oscillator AC or DC?

An oscillator converts DC power into an AC signal by generating a continuous, oscillating waveform without an external input.

2. Is the Oscillator Negative or Positive?

An oscillator uses positive feedback to sustain continuous oscillations.

3. Which Oscillator is Better?

The crystal oscillator is considered better for applications requiring high-frequency stability and accuracy.

4. How Does an Oscillator Differ from an Amplifier?

An oscillator generates its own periodic signal without an external input, while an amplifier boosts the strength of an existing input signal.

5. What is the Difference Between RC and LC Oscillators?

An RC oscillator uses resistors and capacitors for low-frequency generation, while an LC oscillator uses inductors and capacitors for high-frequency generation.

6. What Causes an Oscillator to Fail?

An oscillator can fail due to component aging, temperature variations, power supply issues, or physical damage to the resonator elements, like crystals or inductors.

7. Can an Oscillator be Used as a Signal Generator?

Yes, an oscillator can be used as a signal generator to produce continuous waveforms like sine, square, or triangular signals.

What%20is%20an%20Oscillator%20Types-%20Circuit-%20Working-%20and%20Applications.jpg

#14 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » General Quiz » Yesterday 15:36:53

Hi,

#10749. What does the term in Geography Cusp or Beach cusps mean?

#10750. What does the term in Geography Cut bank mean?

#15 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » English language puzzles » Yesterday 15:19:08

Hi,

#5945. What does the verb (used with object) mutate mean?

#5946. What does the verd (used without object) mutter mean?

#16 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » Doc, Doc! » Yesterday 15:00:08

Hi,

#2569. What does the medical term Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) mean?

#20 Re: Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » crème de la crème » 2026-02-13 22:08:18

2433) Yang Chen-Ning

Gist:

Work

For a long time, physicists assumed that various symmetries characterized nature. In a kind of “mirror world” where right and left were reversed and matter was replaced by antimatter, the same physical laws would apply, they posited. The equality of these laws was questioned concerning the decay of certain elementary particles, however, and in 1956 Chen Ning Yang and Tsung Dao Lee formulated a theory that the left-right symmetry law is violated by the weak interaction. Measurements of electrons’ direction of motion during a cobalt isotope’s beta decay confirmed this.

Summary

Chen Ning Yang (born October 1, 1922, Hofei, Anhwei, China—died October 18, 2025, Beijing, China) was a Chinese-born American theoretical physicist whose research with Tsung-Dao Lee showed that parity—the symmetry between physical phenomena occurring in right-handed and left-handed coordinate systems—is violated when certain elementary particles decay. Until this discovery it had been assumed by physicists that parity symmetry was as universal a law as the conservation of energy or electric charge. This and other studies in particle physics earned Yang and Lee the Nobel Prize for Physics for 1957.

Life

Yang’s father, Yang Ko-chuen (also known as Yang Wu-chih), was a professor of mathematics at Tsinghua University, near Peking. While still young, Yang read the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin and adopted “Franklin” as his first name. After graduation from the Southwest Associated University, in K’unming, he took his B.Sc. in 1942 and his M.S. in 1944. On a fellowship, he studied in the United States, enrolling at the University of Chicago in 1946. He took his Ph.D. in nuclear physics with Edward Teller and then remained in Chicago for a year as an assistant to Enrico Fermi, the physicist who was probably the most influential in Yang’s scientific development. Lee had also come to Chicago on a fellowship, and the two men began the collaboration that led eventually to their Nobel Prize work on parity. In 1949 Yang went to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, and became a professor there in 1955. He became a U.S. citizen in 1964.

Work

Almost from his earliest days as a physicist, Yang had made significant contributions to the theory of the weak interactions—the forces long thought to cause elementary particles to disintegrate. (The strong forces that hold nuclei together and the electromagnetic forces that are responsible for chemical reactions are parity-conserving. Since these are the dominant forces in most physical processes, parity conservation appeared to be a valid physical law, and few physicists before 1955 questioned it.) By 1953 it was recognized that there was a fundamental paradox in this field since one of the newly discovered mesons—the so-called K meson—seemed to exhibit decay modes into configurations of differing parity. Since it was believed that parity had to be conserved, this led to a severe paradox.

After exploring every conceivable alternative, Lee and Yang were forced to examine the experimental foundations of parity conservation itself. They discovered, in early 1956, that, contrary to what had been assumed, there was no experimental evidence against parity nonconservation in the weak interactions. The experiments that had been done, it turned out, simply had no bearing on the question. They suggested a set of experiments that would settle the matter, and, when these were carried out by several groups over the next year, large parity-violating effects were discovered. In addition, the experiments also showed that the symmetry between particle and antiparticle, known as charge conjugation symmetry, is also broken by the weak decays.

In addition to his work on weak interactions, Yang, in collaboration with Lee and others, carried out important work in statistical mechanics—the study of systems with large numbers of particles—and later investigated the nature of elementary particle reactions at extremely high energies. From 1965 Yang was Albert Einstein professor at the Institute of Science, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Long Island. During the 1970s he was a member of the board of Rockefeller University and the American Association for the Advancement of Science and, from 1978, of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, San Diego. He was also on the board of Ben-Gurion University, Beersheba, Israel. He received the Einstein Award in 1957 and the Rumford Prize in 1980; in 1986 he received the Liberty Award and the National Medal of Science.

Details

Yang Chen-Ning (1 October 1922 – 18 October 2025) also known as C.N. Yang and Franklin Yang, was a Chinese-American theoretical physicist who made significant contributions to statistical mechanics, integrable systems, gauge theory, particle physics and condensed matter physics.

Yang is known for his collaboration with Robert Mills in 1954 in developing non-abelian gauge theory, widely known as the Yang–Mills theory, which describes the nuclear forces in the Standard Model of particle physics.

Yang and Tsung-Dao Lee received the 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics for their work on parity non-conservation of the weak interaction, which was confirmed by the Wu experiment in 1956. The two proposed that the conservation of parity, a physical law observed to hold in all other physical processes, is violated in weak nuclear reactions – those nuclear processes that result in the emission of beta or alpha particles.

Early life and education

Yang was born in Hefei, Anhui, China, on 1 October 1922. His mother was Luo Meng-hua and his father, Ko-Chuen Yang (1896–1973), was a mathematician.

Yang attended elementary school and high school in Beijing, and in the autumn of 1937 his family moved to Hefei after the Japanese invaded China. In 1938 they moved to Kunming, Yunnan, where National Southwestern Associated University was located. In the same year, as a second-year student, Yang passed the entrance examination and studied at National Southwestern Associated University. He received a Bachelor of Science in 1942, with his thesis on the application of group theory to molecular spectra, under the supervision of Ta-You Wu.

Yang continued to study graduate courses there for two years under the supervision of Wang Zhuxi (J.S. Wang), working on statistical mechanics. In 1944, he received a Master of Science from National Tsing Hua University, which had moved to Kunming during the Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). Yang was then awarded a scholarship from the Boxer Indemnity Scholarship Program, set up by the United States government using part of the money China had been forced to pay following the Boxer Rebellion. His departure for the United States was delayed for one year, during which time he taught in a middle school as a teacher and studied field theory.

Yang entered the University of Chicago in January 1946 and studied with Edward Teller. He received a Doctor of Philosophy in 1948.

Career

Yang remained at the University of Chicago for a year as an assistant to Enrico Fermi. In 1949 he was invited to do his research at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where he began a period of fruitful collaboration with Tsung-Dao Lee. Lee and Yang published 32 papers together. He was made a permanent member of the Institute in 1952, and full professor in 1955. In 1963, Princeton University Press published his textbook, Elementary Particles. In 1965 he moved to Stony Brook University, where he was named the Albert Einstein Professor of Physics and the first director of the newly founded Institute for Theoretical Physics. Today this institute is known as the C. N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics. Yang retired from Stony Brook University in 1999.

Yang visited the Chinese mainland in 1971 for the first time after the thaw in China–US relations, and subsequently worked to help the Chinese physics community rebuild the research atmosphere, which later eroded due to political movements during the Cultural Revolution. After retiring from Stony Brook, he returned to Beijing as an honorary director of Tsinghua University, where he was the first Huang Jibei-Lu Kaiqun Professor at the Center for Advanced Study (CASTU). He was also one of the two Shaw Prize Founding Members and was a Distinguished Professor-at-Large at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Yang helped to establish the Theoretical Physics Division at the Chern Institute of Mathematics in 1986 at the request of Shiing-Shen Chern who was serving as the inaugural director of the Institute at the time.

Personal life and death

Yang married Tu Chih-li, a teacher, in 1950; they had two sons and a daughter together. His father-in-law was the Kuomintang general Du Yuming. Tu died in October 2003. In January 2005, Yang married Weng Fan, a university student. They met in 1995 at a physics seminar; the couple reestablished contact in February 2004 when Yang moved to China to become affiliated with Tsinghua University. Yang called Weng, who was 54 years his junior, his "final blessing from God".

Yang obtained U.S. citizenship during his research within the country. According to the state-run Xinhua News Agency, Yang said the decision was painful as his father never forgave him for that. According to Xinhua and other mainstream Chinese media, he formally renounced his American citizenship on April 1, 2015. He acknowledged that while the U.S. was a beautiful country that gave him good opportunities to study science, China since his youth had offered the best secondary and undergraduate institutions, though the US had the top graduate studies. However, circumstances changed in favor of China's growth by the turn of the century.

His son Guangnuo was a computer scientist. His second son Guangyu is an astronomer, and his daughter Youli is a doctor.

Yang turned 100 on 1 October 2022, and died in Beijing on 18 October 2025, at the age of 103. The day after the announcement of his death, people gathered and waited in line at Tsinghua University to pay tributes to Yang.

Views on the CEPC

Yang is known for having opposed the construction of the Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC), a 100 km circumference particle collider in China that would study the Higgs boson. He catalogued the project as "guess" work and without guaranteed results. Yang said that "even if they see something with the machine, it's not going to benefit the life of Chinese people any sooner."

yang-13122-portrait-medium.jpg

#21 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » General Quiz » 2026-02-13 19:58:27

Hi,

#10747. What does the term in Geography Culture mean?

#10748. What does the term in Geography Culvert mean?

#22 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » English language puzzles » 2026-02-13 19:46:10

Hi,

#5943. What does the noun mandate mean?

#5944. What does the adjective mandatory mean?

#23 This is Cool » Anion » 2026-02-13 19:22:57

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Anion

Gist

An anion is an atom or molecule that carries a net negative electrical charge because it has gained one or more electrons, resulting in more electrons than protons. Formed typically by non-metals, anions are attracted to the positive electrode (anode) during electrolysis and readily combine with positive ions (cations) to form ionic compounds, like chloride or sulfate.

Anions are negatively-charged ions (meaning they have more electrons than protons due to having gained one or more electrons). Cations are also called positive ions, and anions are also called negative ions.

Summary

Anions are atoms or groups of atoms that have a negative electric charge. An anion has more electrons in its atomic orbitals than it has protons in its atomic nucleus. The opposite of an anion is a cation, which has a positive charge.

The name "anion" comes from the words anode and ion. In an electrochemical cell, anions are attracted to the positively charged anode.

Anions can be monatomic, made of only one atom, or polyatomic, made of multiple atoms. Anions can exist on their own only as gases: to make a solid, ionic liquid, or solution the total electrical charge must be zero, meaning a mix of anions and cations.

Properties

In many crystals the anions are bigger; the little cations fit into the spaces between them.

All anions are Brønsted bases: they can make a chemical bond with a proton, H+, to form a conjugate acid.

Examples

Oxide is the most common anion on Earth. It is made from an oxygen atom with two extra electrons. The formula for oxide is written O2−. The oxide ion reacts with water, so it cannot be dissolved to make a solution.

Chloride is a monatomic anion made from an atom of chlorine with an extra electron. The chemical formula is written Cl−. Chloride is the most common anion in seawater.

Sulfate is the second most common anion in seawater after chloride. It is made of a sulfur atom, four oxygen atoms, and two extra electrons. Sulfate is a special type of anion called an oxyanion, which are made of a central element (like sulfur) surrounded by oxygen atoms.

Hydroxide is a polyatomic anion made of one oxygen atom, one hydrogen atom, and one extra electron. It has the formula OH−. Hydroxide is the conjugate base of water, so it is the strongest base that can be mixed with water. Other strong bases, including the oxide anion, react with water to make hydroxide.  

Details

Anions are negatively charged ions formed when an atom or group of atoms gains one or more valence electrons. The term "anion" comes from "anode ions," reflecting their movement toward the positive terminal in an electrolytic solution. Anions, along with positively charged cations, form ionic bonds that are fundamental to many chemical compounds, such as table salt (sodium chloride). Common examples of anions include fluoride, chloride, and sulfate, each named based on their elemental origin or structural characteristics, following specific nomenclature rules established by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).

The formation of anions is closely tied to the electronic structure of atoms, which consists of a dense nucleus surrounded by electron shells containing orbitals that dictate the arrangement and behavior of electrons. Elements tend to achieve stability by completing their outer electron shell, often following the octet rule, which promotes the formation of anions in various chemical reactions. Understanding anions is essential for grasping broader concepts related to atomic structure, chemical bonding, and the periodic table's organization.

The basic structure of anions is defined, and the development of the modern theory of atomic structure is elaborated. Electronic structure is fundamental to all chemical behaviors and is responsible for the relationships seen in the periodic table.

The Nature of Anions

An anion is any atom or group of atoms that bears a net negative charge due to the presence of one or more extra valence electrons. The term is a contraction of "anode ions," which is a reference to the fact that when a direct electric current is applied to an electrolytic solution, negatively charged ions are attracted to the anode, or positive terminal, of the source of the current. By the same token, cations, from "cathode ions," have a net positive charge and are attracted to the cathode, or negative terminal, of the current source. Anions and cations often combine to form compounds held together with ionic bonds; one common example is sodium chloride (NaCl), better known as table salt, which is created when the sodium cation, Na+, bonds to the chloride anion, Cl−.

The formation of any ion is the result of an atom or molecule gaining or losing one or more valence electrons. This is most apparent in monatomic (single-atom) ions, in which the electrical charge is equal to the oxidation state. For example, the halogens—fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine—are all highly electronegative, meaning that they readily accept an extra valence electron so that their outer electron shell is completely full and therefore stable. The resulting anions are called fluoride, chloride, bromide, iodide, and astatinide, respectively, and they have an electrical charge of 1− because they gained one electron and thus one unit of negative charge. Similarly, the chalcogens oxygen (O) and sulfur (S) readily accept two extra electrons to form the oxide ion, O2−, and the sulfide ion, S2−.

Compound ions in which a central atom is bonded to a number of oxygen atoms are extremely common. These oxoanions tend to form very stable compounds and are the basic materials of many minerals.

The Electronics of Anion Formation

According to the modern theory of atomic structure, each atom contains a very small, extremely dense nucleus that holds at least 99.98 percent of the atom’s mass and all of its positive electrical charge. The nucleus is surrounded by a diffuse and comparatively very large cloud of electrons containing all of the atom’s negative electrical charge. These electrons are allowed to possess only very specific energies. This restricts their movement around the nucleus to specific regions called "electron shells." Within each shell are well-defined regions called "orbitals." The strict geometric arrangement of the orbitals regulates the formation of chemical bonds between atoms.

Each shell and orbital is subject to a number of restrictions that dictate how many electrons it can hold. There are four different types of electron orbitals, designated s, p, d, and f, each of which can contain a specific number of electrons: s orbitals can hold a maximum of two electrons; p orbitals, a maximum of six; d orbitals, a maximum of ten; and f orbitals, a maximum of fourteen. One or more of these orbitals make up an electron shell. The various electron shells are indicated by an integer value known as the "principal quantum number," starting with 1 for the innermost shell, typically referred to as the "n = 1 shell." The standard notation to describe an electron orbital is the principal quantum number, followed by the type of orbital, followed by a superscript number indicating how many electrons it holds. For example, helium has only one s orbital, which is completely full, so its electron configuration is represented as 1s2. The first p orbital appears in the n = 2 shell, the first d orbital in the n = 3 shell, and the first f orbital in the n = 4 shell. Due to variances in energy levels, electrons usually fill atomic orbitals in the order 1s, 2s, 2p, 3s, 3p, 4s, 3d, 4p, 5s, 4d, 5p, 6s, 4f, 5d, 6p, 7s . . . rather than in strict numerical order.

The outermost electron shell is the valence shell, and in all elements, except the noble gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon), the valence shell is incompletely occupied. Because of this, the noble gases are often called "inert gases," reflecting the fact that they are far less chemically reactive than elements whose valence shells are not filled. All noble gases except for helium have eight electrons in their valence shell, as a shell with eight electrons approximates a stable closed-shell configuration of s2p6. This is the basis of the octet rule, which states that atoms of lower atomic numbers tend to achieve the greatest stability when they have eight electrons in their valence shells. The closer an element is to having eight valence electrons, the more likely it is to undergo ionization or a chemical reaction in order to achieve a stable configuration, either by gaining enough electrons to complete the octet or by losing all valence electrons so that the next-highest completed shell becomes the outermost shell. Elements with similar electron distributions in their valence shells typically exhibit similar chemical behaviors, which is the basis on which the periodictable of the elements is arranged.

Naming the Anions

The rules for naming various chemical species are established and standardized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). Monatomic anions and polyatomic anions composed of a single element are named by adding the suffix -ide to the name of the element, either instead of or in addition to the existing suffix. Thus a sulfur anion becomes sulfide, a xenon anion becomes xenonide, a potassium anion becomes potasside, and so on. In some cases, the suffix is added to the element’s Latin name instead of its common name; for example, an anion of silver, which has the Latin name argentum, is called argentide.

Oxoanions are generally named for the central atom of the anion and the number of oxygen atoms that surround it, with the charge number given in parentheses at the end. An oxoanion consisting of a sulfur atom surrounded by three oxygen atoms has the formal name trioxidosulfate, while one with a sulfur atom and four oxygen atoms is called tetraoxidosulfate. The common (nonsystematic) names of these two oxoanions are sulfite and sulfate, respectively, following the convention that the oxoanion with fewer oxygen atoms takes the suffix -ite and the one with more oxygen atoms takes the suffix -ate. If one element is capable of forming more than two different oxoanions, as is the case with chlorine, the prefixes hypo- and per- are used as well, so that the common name of ClO− is hypochlorite, ClO2− is chlorite, ClO3− is chlorate, and ClO4− is perchlorate.

Principal Terms

cation: any chemical species bearing a net positive electrical charge, which causes it to be drawn toward the negative pole, or cathode, of an electrochemical cell.
ionic bond: a type of chemical bond formed by mutual attraction between two ions of opposite charges.
ionization: the process by which an atom or molecule loses or gains one or more electrons to acquire a net positive or negative electrical charge.
oxoanion: an ion consisting of one or more central atoms bonded to a number of oxygen atoms and bearing a net negative electrical charge.
valence electron: an electron that occupies the outermost or valence shell of an atom and participates in chemical processes such as bond formation and ionization.

Additional Information

An anion is an atom that has a negative charge. So, given that anion definition, the answer to the question "Is an anion negative?" is yes. Anions are a type of atom, the smallest particle of an element that still retains the element's properties. Atoms are made of three types of subatomic particles: neutrons, protons, and electrons. Neutrons are neutrally charged subatomic particles and, along with protons, they make up the nucleus. Protons have a positive charge. Electrons are very small subatomic particles that orbit the nucleus in levels called shells. Electrons have a negative charge.

Anions are created when an atom gains one or more electrons. The number of electrons gained by an atom is determined by how many are needed to fill their outer shell. For example, fluorine has seven electrons in its outer shell, but a full outer shell contains eight electrons. Thus, fluorine tends to gain one electron to fill its outer shell and generally has a charge of -1. Oxygen, on the other hand, has an outer shell of six electrons. This means it requires two electrons to complete its outer shell and tends to carry a charge of -2.

Uses for Anions

Fluoride ion is widely used in water supplies to help prevent tooth decay. Chloride is an important component in ion balance in blood. Iodide ion is needed by the thyroid gland to make the hormone thyroxine.

Summary

* Anions are formed by the addition of one or more electrons to the outer shell of an atom.
* Group 17 elements add one electron to the outer shell, group 16 elements add two electrons, and group 15 elements add three electrons.
* Anions are named by dropping the ending of the element's name and adding -ide.

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#24 Re: This is Cool » Miscellany » 2026-02-13 18:32:41

2495) Adhesive

Gist

An adhesive is a substance—such as glue, cement, or paste—that binds materials together through surface attachment, resisting separation. Primarily divided into natural (e.g., starch) and synthetic (e.g., epoxy, acrylic) types, they are used for bonding, sealing, and coating in industrial and consumer applications.

Adhesives are used to bond materials together across virtually every industry, from construction, automotive, and aerospace to everyday household tasks, by creating strong, durable connections that distribute stress evenly, join dissimilar materials (like metal to plastic), and offer aesthetic advantages over mechanical fasteners like nails or screws, by avoiding holes and creating smoother finishes. They're essential for product assembly, packaging (like sealing boxes), labeling (stickers, bottle labels), and repairs, enabling lighter, stronger, and more complex designs in everything from smartphones to spacecraft.

Summary

Adhesive, also known as glue, cement, mucilage, or paste, is any non-metallic substance applied to one or both surfaces of two separate items that binds them together and resists their separation.

The use of adhesives offers certain advantages over other binding techniques such as sewing, mechanical fastenings, and welding. These include the ability to bind different materials together, the more efficient distribution of stress across a joint, the cost-effectiveness of an easily mechanized process, and greater flexibility in design. Disadvantages of adhesive use include decreased stability at high temperatures, relative weakness in bonding large objects with a small bonding surface area, and greater difficulty in separating objects during testing. Adhesives are typically organized by the method of adhesion followed by reactive or non-reactive, a term which refers to whether the adhesive chemically reacts in order to harden. Alternatively, they can be organized either by their starting physical phase or whether their raw stock is of natural or synthetic origin.

Adhesives may be found naturally or produced synthetically. The earliest human use of adhesive-like substances was approximately 200,000 years ago, when Neanderthals produced tar from the dry distillation of birch bark for use in binding stone tools to wooden handles. The first references to adhesives in literature appeared approximately 2000 BC. The Greeks and Romans made great contributions to the development of adhesives. In Europe, glue was not widely used until the period AD 1500–1700. From then until the 1900s increases in adhesive use and discovery were relatively gradual. Only since the 20th century has the development of synthetic adhesives accelerated rapidly, and innovation in the field continues to the present.

Details

An adhesive is any substance that is capable of holding materials together in a functional manner by surface attachment that resists separation. “Adhesive” as a general term includes cement, mucilage, glue, and paste—terms that are often used interchangeably for any organic material that forms an adhesive bond. Inorganic substances such as portland cement also can be considered adhesives, in the sense that they hold objects such as bricks and beams together through surface attachment, but this article is limited to a discussion of organic adhesives, both natural and synthetic.

Natural adhesives have been known since antiquity. Egyptian carvings dating back 3,300 years depict the gluing of a thin piece of veneer to what appears to be a plank of sycamore. Papyrus, an early nonwoven fabric, contained fibres of reedlike plants bonded together with flour paste. Bitumen, tree pitches, and beeswax were used as sealants (protective coatings) and adhesives in ancient and medieval times. The gold leaf of illuminated manuscripts was bonded to paper by egg white, and wooden objects were bonded with glues from fish, horn, and cheese. The technology of animal and fish glues advanced during the 18th century, and in the 19th century rubber- and nitrocellulose-based cements were introduced. Decisive advances in adhesives technology, however, awaited the 20th century, during which time natural adhesives were improved and many synthetics came out of the laboratory to replace natural adhesives in the marketplace. The rapid growth of the aircraft and aerospace industries during the second half of the 20th century had a profound impact on adhesives technology. The demand for adhesives that had a high degree of structural strength and were resistant to both fatigue and severe environmental conditions led to the development of high-performance materials, which eventually found their way into many industrial and domestic applications.

This article begins with a brief explanation of the principles of adhesion and then proceeds to a review of the major classes of natural and synthetic adhesives.

Adhesion

In the performance of adhesive joints, the physical and chemical properties of the adhesive are the most important factors. Also important in determining whether the adhesive joint will perform adequately are the types of adherend (that is, the components being joined—e.g., metal alloy, plastic, composite material) and the nature of the surface pretreatment or primer. These three factors—adhesive, adherend, and surface—have an impact on the service life of the bonded structure. The mechanical behaviour of the bonded structure in turn is influenced by the details of the joint design and by the way in which the applied loads are transferred from one adherend to the other.

Implicit in the formation of an acceptable adhesive bond is the ability of the adhesive to wet and spread on the adherends being joined. Attainment of such interfacial molecular contact is a necessary first step in the formation of strong and stable adhesive joints. Once wetting is achieved, intrinsic adhesive forces are generated across the interface through a number of mechanisms. The precise nature of these mechanisms have been the object of physical and chemical study since at least the 1960s, with the result that a number of theories of adhesion exist. The main mechanism of adhesion is explained by the adsorption theory, which states that substances stick primarily because of intimate intermolecular contact. In adhesive joints this contact is attained by intermolecular or valence forces exerted by molecules in the surface layers of the adhesive and adherend.

In addition to adsorption, four other mechanisms of adhesion have been proposed. The first, mechanical interlocking, occurs when adhesive flows into pores in the adherend surface or around projections on the surface. The second, interdiffusion, results when liquid adhesive dissolves and diffuses into adherend materials. In the third mechanism, adsorption and surface reaction, bonding occurs when adhesive molecules adsorb onto a solid surface and chemically react with it. Because of the chemical reaction, this process differs in some degree from simple adsorption, described above, although some researchers consider chemical reaction to be part of a total adsorption process and not a separate adhesion mechanism. Finally, the electronic, or electrostatic, attraction theory suggests that electrostatic forces develop at an interface between materials with differing electronic band structures. In general, more than one of these mechanisms play a role in achieving the desired level of adhesion for various types of adhesive and adherend.

In the formation of an adhesive bond, a transitional zone arises in the interface between adherend and adhesive. In this zone, called the interphase, the chemical and physical properties of the adhesive may be considerably different from those in the noncontact portions. It is generally believed that the interphase composition controls the durability and strength of an adhesive joint and is primarily responsible for the transference of stress from one adherend to another. The interphase region is frequently the site of environmental attack, leading to joint failure.

The strength of adhesive bonds is usually determined by destructive tests, which measure the stresses set up at the point or line of fracture of the test piece. Various test methods are employed, including peel, tensile lap shear, cleavage, and fatigue tests. These tests are carried out over a wide range of temperatures and under various environmental conditions. An alternate method of characterizing an adhesive joint is by determining the energy expended in cleaving apart a unit area of the interphase. The conclusions derived from such energy calculations are, in principle, completely equivalent to those derived from stress analysis.

Adhesive materials

Virtually all synthetic adhesives and certain natural adhesives are composed of polymers, which are giant molecules, or macromolecules, formed by the linking of thousands of simpler molecules known as monomers. The formation of the polymer (a chemical reaction known as polymerization) can occur during a “cure” step, in which polymerization takes place simultaneously with adhesive-bond formation (as is the case with epoxy resins and cyanoacrylates), or the polymer may be formed before the material is applied as an adhesive, as with thermoplastic elastomers such as styrene-isoprene-styrene block copolymers. Polymers impart strength, flexibility, and the ability to spread and interact on an adherend surface—properties that are required for the formation of acceptable adhesion levels.

Natural adhesives

Natural adhesives are primarily of animal or vegetable origin. Though the demand for natural products has declined since the mid-20th century, certain of them continue to be used with wood and paper products, particularly in corrugated board, envelopes, bottle labels, book bindings, cartons, furniture, and laminated film and foils. In addition, owing to various environmental regulations, natural adhesives derived from renewable resources are receiving renewed attention. The most important natural products are described below.

Animal glue

The term animal glue usually is confined to glues prepared from mammalian collagen, the principal protein constituent of skin, bone, and muscle. When treated with acids, alkalies, or hot water, the normally insoluble collagen slowly becomes soluble. If the original protein is pure and the conversion process is mild, the high-molecular-weight product is called gelatin and may be used for food or photographic products. The lower-molecular-weight material produced by more vigorous processing is normally less pure and darker in colour and is called animal glue.

Animal glue traditionally has been used in wood joining, book bindery, sandpaper manufacture, heavy gummed tapes, and similar applications. In spite of its advantage of high initial tack (stickiness), much animal glue has been modified or entirely replaced by synthetic adhesives.

Casein glue

This product is made by dissolving casein, a protein obtained from milk, in an aqueous alkaline solvent. The degree and type of alkali influences product behaviour. In wood bonding, casein glues generally are superior to true animal glues in moisture resistance and aging characteristics. Casein also is used to improve the adhering characteristics of paints and coatings.

Blood albumen glue

Glue of this type is made from serum albumen, a blood component obtainable from either fresh animal blood or dried soluble blood powder to which water has been added. Addition of alkali to albumen-water mixtures improves adhesive properties. A considerable quantity of glue products from blood is used in the plywood industry.

Starch and dextrin

Starch and dextrin are extracted from corn, wheat, potatoes, or rice. They constitute the principal types of vegetable adhesives, which are soluble or dispersible in water and are obtained from plant sources throughout the world. Starch and dextrin glues are used in corrugated board and packaging and as a wallpaper adhesive.

Natural gums

Substances known as natural gums, which are extracted from their natural sources, also are used as adhesives. Agar, a marine-plant colloid (suspension of extremely minute particles), is extracted by hot water and subsequently frozen for purification. Algin is obtained by digesting seaweed in alkali and precipitating either the calcium salt or alginic acid. Gum arabic is harvested from acacia trees that are artificially wounded to cause the gum to exude. Another exudate is natural rubber latex, which is harvested from Hevea trees. Most gums are used chiefly in water-remoistenable products.

Synthetic adhesives

Although natural adhesives are less expensive to produce, most important adhesives are synthetic. Adhesives based on synthetic resins and rubbers excel in versatility and performance. Synthetics can be produced in a constant supply and at constantly uniform properties. In addition, they can be modified in many ways and are often combined to obtain the best characteristics for a particular application.

The polymers used in synthetic adhesives fall into two general categories—thermoplastics and thermosets. Thermoplastics provide strong, durable adhesion at normal temperatures, and they can be softened for application by heating without undergoing degradation. Thermoplastic resins employed in adhesives include nitrocellulose, polyvinyl acetate, vinyl acetate-ethylene copolymer, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyamides, polyesters, acrylics, and cyanoacrylics.

Thermosetting systems, unlike thermoplastics, form permanent, heat-resistant, insoluble bonds that cannot be modified without degradation. Adhesives based on thermosetting polymers are widely used in the aerospace industry. Thermosets include phenol formaldehyde, urea formaldehyde, unsaturated polyesters, epoxies, and polyurethanes. Elastomer-based adhesives can function as either thermoplastic or thermosetting types, depending on whether cross-linking is necessary for the adhesive to perform its function. The characteristics of elastomeric adhesives include quick assembly, flexibility, variety of type, economy, high peel strength, ease of modification, and versatility. The major elastomers employed as adhesives are natural rubber, butyl rubber, butadiene rubber, styrene-butadiene rubber, nitrile rubber, silicone, and neoprene.

An important challenge facing adhesive manufacturers and users is the replacement of adhesive systems based on organic solvents with systems based on water. This trend has been driven by restrictions on the use of volatile organic compounds (VOC), which include solvents that are released into the atmosphere and contribute to the depletion of ozone. In response to environmental regulation, adhesives based on aqueous emulsions and dispersions are being developed, and solvent-based adhesives are being phased out.

The polymer types noted above are employed in a number of functional types of adhesives. These functional types are described below.

Contact cements

Contact adhesives or cements are usually based on solvent solutions of neoprene. They are so named because they are usually applied to both surfaces to be bonded. Following evaporation of the solvent, the two surfaces may be joined to form a strong bond with high resistance to shearing forces. Contact cements are used extensively in the assembly of automotive parts, furniture, leather goods, and decorative laminates. They are effective in the bonding of plastics.

Structural adhesives

Structural adhesives are adhesives that generally exhibit good load-carrying capability, long-term durability, and resistance to heat, solvents, and fatigue. Ninety-five percent of all structural adhesives employed in original equipment manufacture fall into six structural-adhesive families: (1) epoxies, which exhibit high strength and good temperature and solvent resistance, (2) polyurethanes, which are flexible, have good peeling characteristics, and are resistant to shock and fatigue, (3) acrylics, a versatile adhesive family that bonds to oily parts, cures quickly, and has good overall properties, (4) anaerobics, or surface-activated acrylics, which are good for bonding threaded metal parts and cylindrical shapes, (5) cyanoacrylates, which bond quickly to plastic and rubber but have limited temperature and moisture resistance, and (6) silicones, which are flexible, weather well out-of-doors, and provide good sealing properties. Each of these families can be modified to provide adhesives that have a range of physical and mechanical properties, cure systems, and application techniques.

Polyesters, polyvinyls, and phenolic resins are also used in industrial applications but have processing or performance limitations. High-temperature adhesives, such as polyimides, have a limited market.

Hot-melt adhesives

Hot-melt adhesives are employed in many nonstructural applications. Based on thermoplastic resins, which melt at elevated temperatures without degrading, these adhesives are applied as hot liquids to the adherend. Commonly used polymers include polyamides, polyesters, ethylene-vinyl acetate, polyurethanes, and a variety of block copolymers and elastomers such as butyl rubber, ethylene-propylene copolymer, and styrene-butadiene rubber.

Hot-melts find wide application in the automotive and home-appliance fields. Their utility, however, is limited by their lack of high-temperature strength, the upper use temperature for most hot-melts being in the range of 40–65 °C (approximately 100–150 °F). In order to improve performance at higher temperatures, so-called structural hot-melts—thermoplastics modified with reactive urethanes, moisture-curable urethanes, or silane-modified polyethylene—have been developed. Such modifications can lead to enhanced peel adhesion, higher heat capability (in the range of 70–95 °C [160–200 °F]), and improved resistance to ultraviolet radiation.

Pressure-sensitive adhesives

Pressure-sensitive adhesives, or PSAs, represent a large industrial and commercial market in the form of adhesive tapes and films directed toward packaging, mounting and fastening, masking, and electrical and surgical applications. PSAs are capable of holding adherends together when the surfaces are mated under briefly applied pressure at room temperature. (The difference between these adhesives and contact cements is that the latter require no pressure to bond.)

Materials used to formulate PSA systems include natural and synthetic rubbers, thermoplastic elastomers, polyacrylates, polyvinylalkyl ethers, and silicones. These polymers, in both solvent-based and hot-melt formulations, are applied as a coating onto a substrate of paper, cellophane, plastic film, fabric, or metal foil. As solvent-based adhesive formulations are phased out in response to environmental regulations, water-based PSAs will find greater use.

Ultraviolet-cured adhesives

Ultraviolet-cured adhesives became available in the early 1960s but developed rapidly with advances in chemical and equipment technology during the 1980s. These types of adhesive normally consist of a monomer (which also can serve as the solvent) and a low-molecular-weight prepolymer combined with a photoinitiator. Photoinitiators are compounds that break down into free radicals upon exposure to ultraviolet radiation. The radicals induce polymerization of the monomer and prepolymer, thus completing the chain extension and cross-linking required for the adhesive to form. Because of the low process temperatures and very rapid polymerization (from 2 to 60 seconds), ultraviolet-cured adhesives are making rapid advances in the electronic, automotive, and medical areas. They consist mainly of acrylated formulations of silicones, urethanes, and methacrylates. Combined ultraviolet–heat-curing formulations also exist.

Additional Information

An adhesive is a type of substance that holds two or more materials together with cohesive forces and surface attachment in a practical way. Adhesives can be made from and be composed of a variety of substances such as tree sap, bee wax, cement, and epoxy.Ideally, there are two broad adhesive categories, natural and synthetic adhesives. Most commercially found adhesives are synthetic adhesives as they provide better consistency, bond strength, and adaptability compared to natural adhesives. Synthetic adhesives are further classified as consumer adhesives and Industrial adhesives based on their application.

An adhesive’s chemical composition determines its application methods, usage, and bonding strength. Therefore, adhesive manufacturers need to custom-engineer modern synthetic based on the needs of different industries and applications.

Adhesive Applications In Various Industries

1. Bonding:
Bonding is a process in which two surfaces are practically joined together with the help of a suitable adhesive, such as epoxy adhesives. Adhesives are used for bonding materials in various industries, such as electronics, medical, food, optical, chemical and oil and gas industries to bond a range of metals, ceramics, glass, plastics, rubbers and composites.

2. Sealing:
Unlike bonding which sees two surfaces fused together, sealants are ideal for closing gaps and cavities to block fluids, dust, and dirt from either entering or getting out. Sealants are widely used in aerospace, oil and gas, chemical, electronic, optical, automotive and specialty OEM industries.

3. Coating:
Coatings are predominantly used in aerospace, electronic conformal coating, along with some other uses in OEM and oil & chemical industries. Industrial adhesive coatings can provide superior protection against chemicals, dust and moisture,  reduce friction, improve abrasion resistance and provide EMI/RFI shielding.

4. Potting:
Potting is an encapsulation method used in the electronics industry to cover small or large electrical components placed inside a housing with a suitable potting material that can withstand high temperatures, protect the circuits from moisture, dirt, dust and other harsh conditions. Potting and encapsulation are used for electronic and microelectronic components, such as sensors, motors, coils, transformers, capacitors, switches, connectors, power supplies, and cable harnesses.

5. Impregnation:
Impregnation is a method used to wet various fibres, such as glass, carbon, kevlar, aramid among others. Once the fibres are completely saturated with the resin, the resin is allowed to fully cure in place forming a composite substrate. Such impregnated composite surfaces are widely used in the aerospace, windmill and electronics and electrical industries.

How Do Adhesives Work?

The working of adhesive depends on the types of bonding process used to attach the surfaces to each other. Mechanical adhesion and chemical adhesion are two types of bondings that can be used to stick one surface to another with adhesives.

Usually, surfaces that need to be attached with the help of adhesives, have a lot of micropores. These pores when filled with adhesives act as grips to keep another surface attached to them. This is called mechanical adhesion. With mechanical adhesion, the adhesives are in liquid form. The liquid adhesives will gradually penetrate the pores during the drying and curing process. You should also keep in mind that mechanical bonding is dependent on the surface roughness and surface energy of the substrates to be bonded. The higher the surface energy and roughness  of a substance, the stronger is the bond.

On the other hand, chemical bonding is completely different which sees the surface of a material completely bond with another material on a molecular level. It is a complex process but very effective at the same time. Chemical bonding is further categorised into two types; adsorption and chemisorption depending on the type of bond between the adhesive’s molecules and the surface. Although chemical adhesives are easily available, they are not a common form of adhesive used in Industries.

Types of Adhesives

1. Hot Melt:
Hot melt is a type of thermoplastic polymer adhesive. Thermoplastic polymer adhesives are in a solid state at room temperature. During the application process , they are liquified by heating to be applied as an adhesive. Hot melt adhesives are used for manufacturing and packaging purposes in a wide array of industries due to their superior bonding strength, versatility and setting time. They are also eco-friendly, safe and have a longer shelf life.

Different hot melt adhesives might have different softening points and hardening times as per their applications. Some of the common types of hot melt adhesives are polyurethane, metallocene, EVA hot melt, and polyethene hot melt adhesives.

Let’s talk about reactive hot melt adhesives, which are different from hot melt adhesives. Reactive hot melt adhesives, once applied to a surface and cured, will not be able to melt again as they generate additional chemical bonds during the curing process. This makes reactive hot melt adhesives a better choice than simple hot melt adhesives as they have stronger adherence. Reactive hot melt or RHM are high-quality adhesives also known for their heightened resistance to moisture, and other chemicals with higher thermal stability.

2. Thermosetting:
Thermosetting adhesives are materials which cannot be re-melted after they have cured. Thermosetting adhesives are usually made of two parts, namely, the resin and hardener. However one-part forms can also be found.

There are various types of thermosetting grades such as:

* Phenolics
* Epoxies
* Polyesters
* Polyurethanes
* Silicones

Out of these, epoxy thermosetting resins are the most commonly used in various industries such as electronics and electrical, oil and chemical, automotive, aerospace, optical etc. This is due to their excellent resistance to heat and harsh chemicals and superior mechanical bonding properties.

3. Pressure Sensitive:
Pressure-sensitive adhesives are low-modulus elastomers which means they can be easily taken apart, but are the best choice for light usage. Pressure-sensitive adhesives can be easily found in tapes, bandages, sticky notes, etc. Pressure sensitive adhesives are non-structural adhesives which are not suitable for high-pressure industrial applications. However, they can be used for lighter and thinner material surfaces for which strong adhesives are not suitable. Pressure sensitive adhesives are also cheaper as compared to other adhesive materials and can be found more easily.

4. Contact Adhesive:
Contact adhesives are generally used to create strong mechanical bonds by applying adhesive to both surfaces that are supposed to be bonded together. Contact adhesives are also elastomeric which means the polymers used in the adhesives have rubber-like properties which helps them stay in shape. This gives contact adhesives excellent flexibility and mechanical strength. These adhesives are commonly used in the automotive industry, construction, aerospace and OEM for sealing and coating. They can also be found in rubber cement or countertop laminates. Contact adhesives are ideal for applications which require stability and durability.

Adhesive Application Methods

1. Manual:
As the name suggests, in this method, the applicator uses handheld devices and tools to apply adhesives to the surfaces. Manual adhesive application methods can include spraying, web coating, using a brush and a roller, curtain coating etc. Manual application is cost-effective and is recommended for smaller applications.

2. Glue Applicator:
Glue applicators are handheld devices that assist you to apply adhesives uniformly and at a faster rate than manually. These applicators contain a gun fitted with a cartridge containing the adhesive. A mixing tip is attached to the front of the cartridge to eliminate the need for any manual mixing. These semi-automatic devices enable higher speed, precision and efficiency. Glue applicators are ideal for medium to large-scale applications and are commonly used in the aerospace, electronics and optical industry to fuse small and detailed pieces of equipment.

3. Automatic Dispensing:
Automatic dispensing is ideal for fast-paced and high-volume environments where consistency and quality finish is crucial. This method is more costly as compared to the above two, however, automatic dispensing can increase efficiency, reduce waste and complete the task at a large scale. Metre-mix-dispense systems are used for two component adhesives and robotic dispensing is used for single component adhesives.

Conclusion

Adhesives are used in almost every manufacturing and packaging industry and are an important part of their process. As we have seen, there are different types of adhesives with varying properties suitable for numerous industries.

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#25 Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » Come Quotes - III » 2026-02-13 18:01:30

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Come Quotes - III

1. Put two ships in the open sea, without wind or tide, and, at last, they will come together. Throw two planets into space, and they will fall one on the other. Place two enemies in the midst of a crowd, and they will inevitably meet; it is a fatality, a question of time; that is all. - Jules Verne

2. On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. - Charles Babbage

3. I've always believed that if you put in the work, the results will come. - Michael Jordan

4. From the deepest desires often come the deadliest hate. - Socrates

5. The most important thing about Spaceship Earth - an instruction book didn't come with it. - R. Buckminster Fuller

6. Hope smiles from the threshold of the year to come, whispering, 'It will be happier.' - Alfred Lord Tennyson

7. Tears come from the heart and not from the brain. - Leonardo da Vinci

8. What goes up must come down. - Isaac Newton.

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