ABSTRACT
In considering ways that physics has helped advance biology and medicine, what typically comes to mind are the various tools used by researchers and clinicians. We think of the optics put to work in microscopes, endoscopes, and lasers; the advanced diagnostics permitted through magnetic, x-ray, and ultrasound imaging; and even the nanotools, that a
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Section I. Anatomical Physics
part |2 pages
Section II. Physics of Perception
part |2 pages
Section III. Biomechanics
part |2 pages
Section IV. Bioelectrical Physics
part |2 pages
Section V. Diagnostic Physics
part |2 pages
Section VI. Physics of AccessoryMedicine