Previous in Forum: Light Storage   Next in Forum: Speed of Light and Mirrors
Close
Close
Close
2 comments
Rate Comments: Nested
Commentator
Hobbies - Musician - New Member Hobbies - DIY Welding - New Member Hobbies - Fishing - New Member Engineering Fields - Acoustical Engineering - New Member Engineering Fields - Electrical Engineering - New Member United Kingdom - Member - New Member

Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 58
Good Answers: 1

Third Dimension in Electron Microscope etc

10/08/2010 3:32 PM

Ok, laugh it up.

How about my non patent Third dimension to electron microscope.

Basically you get several phased beams to emit onto the subject allowing for a higher count or higher resolution, and record each individual reflected electron frame by the use of banks of high frequency processor's multiplexed and in phase to allow for exceptionally high frame rates and obviously a huge memory to store and play back such high detail slow motion footage, and the large computing power required to syncronize and display the data would be interesting.

Obviously you can adapt this system for use with normal types of filming at extreme speeds.

Good health Dub

__________________
If you do not have you own philosophy you cannot amend it.
Register to Reply
Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!
Power-User

Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Averill Park, NY
Posts: 250
Good Answers: 4
#1

Re: Third dimension in electron microscope etc

10/08/2010 5:04 PM

As in SEM or Analog TV's 3-D Images are transmitted using a raster scan method. A slow process in SEM scanning electron microscopy where surface reconstruction of thin films and substrates can be of a timely process. Wouldn't bombarding an object with mixed phase electrons create too much backscatter and defeat the purpose of obtaining a finite margin of error and well reprented images?

__________________
"There isn't a scientific community. It's a culture. It is a very undisciplined organization." ~ Francois Rabelais
Register to Reply Score 1 for Good Answer
Commentator
Hobbies - Musician - New Member Hobbies - DIY Welding - New Member Hobbies - Fishing - New Member Engineering Fields - Acoustical Engineering - New Member Engineering Fields - Electrical Engineering - New Member United Kingdom - Member - New Member

Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 58
Good Answers: 1
#2

Re: Third Dimension in Electron Microscope etc

10/10/2010 7:33 AM

Ok. lets put it another way i am no genius of physics, i just have ideas i have hundreds.

Has nobody in the physics world tried to work on the idea of multiplexing processors out of phase of each over to allow for ridiculously high sample rates to be used for looking at microscopic items i extreme slow motion.

Scanning objects is far to slow there must be better methods than that, you just have not found them (physics people). Maybe dedicate a processor to each set of pixels, and yes i know that sounds ridiculous, but then doesn't all physics sound ridiculous.

I'm getting tired of dragging these old theory's around with me as they are weighing me down in part ways, most people i have ever talked to about things just fry up.

Having real world physicists blast me is absolutely fine, i don't mind i am actually here for that reason.

Also if there is even the slightest bit of usefulness, its good to be of service.

The electron / photon part to this should really be a different thread, as the idea is a separate thing, ie can you create a higher frequency out of other electromagnetic waves by mixing them to create harmonic frequency's higher than we can at the moment generate them, for the use of detecting things in an electron microscope or other field of science.

Good Health Dub

__________________
If you do not have you own philosophy you cannot amend it.
Register to Reply Off Topic (Score 5)
Register to Reply 2 comments

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!

Previous in Forum: Light Storage   Next in Forum: Speed of Light and Mirrors
You might be interested in: Microscope Stages, Electron Microscopes

Advertisement