Ultrasonics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Not to be confused with ultrasound.
Ultrasonics is a trade term coined by the Ultrasonic Manufacturers Association and used by its successor, the Ultrasonic Industry Association, to refer to the use of high-intensity acoustic energy to change materials. This usage is contrasted to ultrasound, which is generally reserved for imaging, as in sonar, materials examination (NDI), and diagnostics (mammography, doppler bloodflow, etc.). However, in spite of this distinction, much technical material on ultrasound imaging actually uses the term ultrasonics, for example
- Ultrasonic Flaw Detection for Technicians, 3rd ed., 2004 by J. C. Drury
- Ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation : engineering and biological material characterization, Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, c2004, by Tribikram Kundu
[edit] Published Ultrasonics Articles
- Chapter 1 of Ultrasonic Flaw Detection for Technicians, 3rd ed., 2004 by J. C. Drury (~5 pages)