Likely a beginner's question. First time I said "DIC microscopy" out loud, and to a group with a sense of humor, it occurred to me that the industry might spell it out rather than go on as if it were every Tom, Dic, and Harry.
How's it referred to in industry or academia??
DIC microscopy
Re: DIC microscopy
DIC: Differential interference contrast microscopy, also known as Nomarski interference contrast.
- Crater Eddie
- Posts: 1858
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2014 4:39 pm
- Location: Illinois USA
Re: DIC microscopy
In my head I always pronounce it Dee Eye See.
CE
CE
Olympus BH-2 / BHTU
LOMO BIOLAM L-2-2
LOMO POLAM L-213 / BIOLAM L-211 hybrid
LOMO Multiscope (Biolam)
Cameras: Canon T3i, Olympus E-P1 MFT, Amscope 3mp USB
LOMO BIOLAM L-2-2
LOMO POLAM L-213 / BIOLAM L-211 hybrid
LOMO Multiscope (Biolam)
Cameras: Canon T3i, Olympus E-P1 MFT, Amscope 3mp USB
Re: DIC microscopy
I hear your (smirk!) quandary regards to: 'DIC'. As a 'babyboomer' I had trepidation with saying: 'Dick' for folks named Richard! I've adjusted to this usage of: 'dick'. But my 1964 text (early early days of biologists embracing 'DIC' microscopy...well circa 1964..the gamut of 'DIC' microscopes were termed: interference microscopes.
At formal talks, use of: "DIC microscopy" is legitimate and proper, to my sense of encountered publications in refereed journals. Charlie Guevara BTW...I still sense it crude to in public talk of: "anal personality tendancies"...this I feel is not a cultural handicap on my part...simply too graphic a choice of words...go figure!? thanks for this posting!
I'd love to purchase a sensible DIC microscope system ( I'm con-USA) for my freshwater live protist/meiofauna microscopy.
At formal talks, use of: "DIC microscopy" is legitimate and proper, to my sense of encountered publications in refereed journals. Charlie Guevara BTW...I still sense it crude to in public talk of: "anal personality tendancies"...this I feel is not a cultural handicap on my part...simply too graphic a choice of words...go figure!? thanks for this posting!
I'd love to purchase a sensible DIC microscope system ( I'm con-USA) for my freshwater live protist/meiofauna microscopy.
- Attachments
-
- DSCN3846.JPG (134.03 KiB) Viewed 3137 times
-
- DSCN3845.JPG (25.83 KiB) Viewed 3138 times
-
- DSCN3851.JPG (181.94 KiB) Viewed 3138 times
Re: DIC microscopy
Intersting point. I always say "DICK". Not D-I-C.
Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/micromundus
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/micromundusphotography
Web: https://hakankvarnstrom.com
Olympus BX51 | Olympus CX23 | Olympus SZ40 | Carl ZEISS EVO LS 10 Lab6 | Carl Zeiss Jena Sedival
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/micromundusphotography
Web: https://hakankvarnstrom.com
Olympus BX51 | Olympus CX23 | Olympus SZ40 | Carl ZEISS EVO LS 10 Lab6 | Carl Zeiss Jena Sedival
-
- Posts: 6314
- Joined: Fri May 15, 2015 12:15 am
Re: DIC microscopy
PZO called their version the Polarizing Interference Microscope. No mention of Nomarski. Baker , in the 1950's used the term Interference Microscope. AO used a modified version of the Baker and called it an Interference MIcroscope and then there were Interferometers.
It depends to some degree, whether the prisms employed are Wollaston Prisms or Nomarski Prisms, as to whether the term Nomarski is included , as in Nomarski DIC or sometimes D I C after Nomarski. There were patents involved in the Nomarski system, so companies like PZO, probably sought to get around the patents by making a modified version. The manual I have covering the entire PZO system (95 pages) never once mentions Nomarski nor uses the letters DIC. Reference is made to a PI microscope, though.
As an aside. There is an old long standing family name in my area. The Heads, and of course eventually, one of the offspring had to be named Richard.
It depends to some degree, whether the prisms employed are Wollaston Prisms or Nomarski Prisms, as to whether the term Nomarski is included , as in Nomarski DIC or sometimes D I C after Nomarski. There were patents involved in the Nomarski system, so companies like PZO, probably sought to get around the patents by making a modified version. The manual I have covering the entire PZO system (95 pages) never once mentions Nomarski nor uses the letters DIC. Reference is made to a PI microscope, though.
As an aside. There is an old long standing family name in my area. The Heads, and of course eventually, one of the offspring had to be named Richard.