introscope
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]introscope (plural introscopes)
- An optical device similar to an endoscope, used in various industrial settings such as checking jet engines for cracks, observing nuclear reactors for cracks, or measuring the fat layer on a meat carcass.
- 1959, “Nuclear Power: The Journal of British Nuclear Engineering”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name), page 110:
- The useful life of the introscope could be limited by several factors: acquired radioactivity, failure of the lamp, and loss of transparency in the lenses caused by their darkening under gamma-radiation .
- 1960, Chemical & Process Engineering, volume 41, page 11:
- The photograph shows the examination of the internal surface of a tube with a moving mirror, two-power magnification introscope.
- 1962, New Scientist (volume 14, number 287, page 338)
- The picture shows the introscope mounted on a valve over one of the charging holes of the fast reactor.
- 1975, Quarterly Review of Agricultural Economics - Volumes 28-31, page 31:
- The results show that, of the conductivity probe and the introscope, the latter instrument indicated a higher level of accuracy;
- 1984, Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, page 512:
- These measurement were examined for their ability to predict the corresponding carcass introscope measurements.