|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Nanostructured materials take on an enormously rich variety of
properties and promise exciting new advances in micromechanical,
electronic, and magnetic devices as well as in molecular
fabrications. The structure-composition-processing-property
relationships for these sub 100 nm-sized materials can only be
understood by employing an array of modern microscopy and
microanalysis tools. Handbook of Microscopy for Nanotechnology aims
to provide an overview of the basics and applications of various
microscopy techniques for nanotechnology. This handbook highlights
various key microcopic techniques and their applications in this
fast-growing field. Topics to be covered include the following:
scanning near field optical microscopy, confocal optical
microscopy, atomic force microscopy, magnetic force microscopy,
scanning turning microscopy, high-resolution scanning electron
microscopy, orientational imaging microscopy, high-resolution
transmission electron microscopy, scanning transmission electron
microscopy, environmental transmission electron microscopy,
quantitative electron diffraction, Lorentz microscopy, electron
holography, 3-D transmission electron microscopy, high-spatial
resolution quantitative microanalysis, electron-energy-loss
spectroscopy and spectral imaging, focused ion beam, secondary ion
microscopy, and field ion microscopy.
This book provides an overview of Chinese RMB exchange markets and
its risk management strategies. The view that RMB is playing an
increasingly international role has been widely accepted by
practitioners as well as scholars worldwide. Moreover, the Chinese
government is opening the control of RMB exchange market step by
step. However, some related topics are under heated debate, such as
how to manage and warn of the currency crisis, what the trend of
RMB exchange rate in the future is, and how to hedge the exchange
risk in the process of RMB internationalization. In this book, we
will give distinct answers to the above questions.
This book is the first academic work on the philosophy of
engineering in China that reflects two decades of research. It puts
forward a new thesis, namely that the core maxim in the philosophy
of engineering is "I create, therefore I am," which is radically
different from the Cartesian maxim: "I think, therefore I am." In
addition, the book offers the first detailed portrait of the roots
and evolution of the philosophy of engineering in China. The book
begins by discussing the triptych thesis of science, technology and
engineering, which argues that there are a number of important
distinctions between the three, e.g. scientific activities are
chiefly based on discovery, while technological activities center
on invention, and engineering activities focus on creation.
Considering the latest developments in the philosophy of
engineering, the author also analyzes engineering communities,
engineering practice and a micro-meso-macro framework. In
subsequent chapters, the author separately analyzes the three
stages of engineering activities: planning, operating and using
artifacts. In the closing chapter, two views on the philosophy of
engineering (as a new subdiscipline of philosophy and as a
philosophy in its own right) are briefly explained.
This book provides an overview of Chinese RMB exchange markets and
its risk management strategies. The view that RMB is playing an
increasingly international role has been widely accepted by
practitioners as well as scholars worldwide. Moreover, the Chinese
government is opening the control of RMB exchange market step by
step. However, some related topics are under heated debate, such as
how to manage and warn of the currency crisis, what the trend of
RMB exchange rate in the future is, and how to hedge the exchange
risk in the process of RMB internationalization. In this book, we
will give distinct answers to the above questions.
This book is the first academic work on the philosophy of
engineering in China that reflects two decades of research. It puts
forward a new thesis, namely that the core maxim in the philosophy
of engineering is "I create, therefore I am," which is radically
different from the Cartesian maxim: "I think, therefore I am." In
addition, the book offers the first detailed portrait of the roots
and evolution of the philosophy of engineering in China. The book
begins by discussing the triptych thesis of science, technology and
engineering, which argues that there are a number of important
distinctions between the three, e.g. scientific activities are
chiefly based on discovery, while technological activities center
on invention, and engineering activities focus on creation.
Considering the latest developments in the philosophy of
engineering, the author also analyzes engineering communities,
engineering practice and a micro-meso-macro framework. In
subsequent chapters, the author separately analyzes the three
stages of engineering activities: planning, operating and using
artifacts. In the closing chapter, two views on the philosophy of
engineering (as a new subdiscipline of philosophy and as a
philosophy in its own right) are briefly explained.
|
|