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  • nuclear magnetic resonance
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  • nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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  • relative magnetic permeability
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  • resistive magnetic resonance scanner
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  • static magnetic field
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  • magnetic field gradient vector
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  • magnetic moment nulling
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  • magnetic resonance mammography
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  • magnetic resonance myelography
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  • magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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  • magnetic resonance functional neuroimaging
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  • midfield magnetic resonance scanner
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  • nuclear magnetic resonance
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  • relative magnetic permeability
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  • volume magnetic susceptibility
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  • magnetic dipole
    ÀÚ±â(ÀÚ¼º) ½Ö±ØÀÚ
  • magnetic dipole moment
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  • magnetic disk
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  • magnetic domain
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  • magnetic electricity
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  • magnetic field
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  • magnetic field
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  • magnetic field effect
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  • magnetic field gradient
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  • magnetic field gradient vector
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  • magnetic field intensity
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  • magnetic field strength
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  • magnetic flux density
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  • magnetic resonance imaging [=MRI]
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LMR left medial rectus [muscle]; localized magnetic resonance; lymphocytic meningpolyradiculitis
MARS magnetic anchor retinal stimulation; methionyl-transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase; mouse antirat s...
MCD magnetic circular dichroism; mast-cell degranulation; mean cell diameter; mean of consecutive differ...
MF magnetic field; meat free; medium frequency; megafarad; membrane filler; merthiolate-formaldehyde [s...
MHV magnetic heart vector; middle hepatic vein; mouse hepatitis virus
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MRI CT)/magnetic resonance imaging
13C NMR Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance
CMS Cervical magnetic stimulation
DWI Diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging
E/MF electric and magnetic field
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging A special imaging technique used to image internal stuctures of the body, particularly the soft tissues. An MRI image is often superior to a normal X-ray image.
It uses the influence of a large magnet to polarize hydrogen atoms in the tissues and then monitors the summation of the spinning energies within living cells.
Images are very clear and are particularly good for soft tissue, brain and spinal cord, joints and abdomen. These scans may be used for detecting some cancers or for following their progress.
Acronym: MRI
(11 Nov 1997)
magnetic resonance imaging, cine A type of imaging technique used primarily in the field of cardiology. By coordinating the fast gradient-echo mri sequence with retrospective ecg-gating, numerous short time frames evenly spaced in the cardiac cycle are produced. These images are laced together in a cinematic display so that wall motion of the ventricles, valve motion, and blood flow patterns in the heart and great vessels can be visualised.
(12 Dec 1998)
magnetic resonance scanning A special imaging technique used to image internal stuctures of the body, particularly the soft tissues. An MRI image is often superior to a normal X-ray image.
It uses the influence of a large magnet to polarize hydrogen atoms in the tissues and then monitors the summation of the spinning energies within living cells.
Images are very clear and are particularly good for soft tissue, brain and spinal cord, joints and abdomen. These scans may be used for detecting some cancers or for following their progress.
Acronym: MRI
(11 Nov 1997)
magnetic resonance spectroscopy Detection and measurement of the resonant spectra of molecular species in a tissue or sample.
(05 Mar 2000)
magnetic stress tensor <radiobiology> A second-rank tensor, proportional to the dyadic product of the magnetic field (B) with itself. The divergence of the magnetic stress tensor gives that part of the force which a magnetic field exerts on a unit volume of conducting fluid due to the curvature of the magnetic field lines.
(09 Oct 1997)
magnetic switching <radiobiology> The use as switches of saturable inductors for producing high power pulses without electrical arcs. This is a principal technology for extending single-shot accelerators in light-ion-beam-driven inertial confinement fusion to repetitively pulsed devices for possible reactors. Three terawatt, 200 KJ magnetic switches have been developed for fusion drivers at Sandia National Laboratories. (Info from the 1985 OSTI Glossary of Fusion Energy, may be out of date.)
(09 Oct 1997)
magnetic viscosity <physics> A magnetic field in a conducting fluid will damp fluid motions perpendicular to the field lines, similar to ordinary viscosity, even in the absence of sizeable mechanical forces or electric fields.
(09 Oct 1997)
nuclear magnetic resonance Spectroscopic method of measuring the magnetic moment of atomic nuclei in a covalent bond. Clinical application is in biochemical, metabolic, and physiologic studies of living tissue. It includes proton and electron spin-echo and spin-relaxation times.
(12 Dec 1998)
nuclear magnetic resonance, biomolecular Nmr spectroscopy on small- to medium-size biological macromolecules. This is often used for structural investigation of proteins and nucleic acids, and often involves more than one isotope.
(12 Dec 1998)
nuclear magnetic resonance imaging A special imaging technique used to image internal stuctures of the body, particularly the soft tissues. An MRI image is often superior to a normal X-ray image.
It uses the influence of a large magnet to polarize hydrogen atoms in the tissues and then monitors the summation of the spinning energies within living cells.
Images are very clear and are particularly good for soft tissue, brain and spinal cord, joints and abdomen. These scans may be used for detecting some cancers or for following their progress.
Acronym: MRI
(11 Nov 1997)
nuclear magnetic resonance tomography A special imaging technique used to image internal stuctures of the body, particularly the soft tissues. An MRI image is often superior to a normal X-ray image.
It uses the influence of a large magnet to polarize hydrogen atoms in the tissues and then monitors the summation of the spinning energies within living cells.
Images are very clear and are particularly good for soft tissue, brain and spinal cord, joints and abdomen. These scans may be used for detecting some cancers or for following their progress.
Acronym: MRI
(11 Nov 1997)
toroidal magnetic cusps A hybrid confinement scheme operating at high beta. A region of closed toroidal magnetic flux with high-beta plasma is separated by a narrow sheath from the surrounding field, which contains externally produced poloidal components arranged in a toroidal line-cusp configuration. Plasma migrating to the outer sheath is temporarily mirror-confined before being removed in a divertor system.
(09 Oct 1997)
unit of magnetic field intensity See: gauss, tesla.
(05 Mar 2000)
lens, magnetic <microscopy> Circular electromagnets capable of projecting a precise circular magnetic field in a specified region. The field acts like an optical lens, having the same attributes (focal length angle of divergence etc.) and errors (spherical aberration, chromatic aberration, astigmatism etc.). They are used to focus and steer electrons in an Electron Microscope.
(05 Aug 1998)
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