Page 2: Research news on Acoustic techniques

Acoustic techniques are experimental or analytical methods that exploit the generation, propagation, and detection of sound or ultrasound waves to probe material, structural, or environmental properties. They encompass approaches such as acoustic emission monitoring, ultrasonic testing, impedance and resonance measurements, and acoustic spectroscopy. These techniques rely on wave–matter interactions (reflection, refraction, scattering, absorption) to infer parameters including elastic moduli, defect distributions, phase composition, flow characteristics, or biological tissue structure. Acoustic methods are widely used for nondestructive evaluation, in situ monitoring, and real-time sensing, often offering high sensitivity to microstructural changes and the ability to operate in opaque or complex media.

A light-programmable, dynamic ultrasound wavefront

The notion of a phased array was initially articulated by Nobel Prize recipient K. F. Braun. Phased arrays have subsequently evolved into a formidable mechanism for wave manipulation. This assertion holds particularly true ...

Noninvasive stent imaging powered by light and sound

In a new study, researchers show, for the first time, that photoacoustic microscopy can image stents through skin, potentially offering a safer, easier way to monitor these life-saving devices. Each year, around 2 million ...

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