• Title/Summary/Keyword: Alexander's gate

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Fabrication and Properties of Under Gate Field Emitter Array for Back Light Unit in LCD

  • Jung, Yong-Jun;Park, Jae-Hong;Jeong, Jin-Soo;Nam, Joong-Woo;Berdinsky, Alexander S.;Yoo, Ji-Beom;Park, Chong-Yun
    • 한국정보디스플레이학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2005.07b
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    • pp.1530-1533
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    • 2005
  • We investigated under-gate type carbon nanotube field emitter arrays (FEAs) for back light unit (BLU) in liquid crystal display (LCD). Gate oxide was formed by wet etching of ITO coated glass substrate instead of depositing $SiO_2$ on the glass substrate. Wet etching is easer and simpler than depositing and etching of thick gate oxide to isolate the gate metal from cathode electrode in triode. Field emission characteristic s of triode structure were measured. The maximum current density of 92.5 ${\mu}A/cm^2$ was when the gate and anode voltage was 95 and 2500 V, respectively at the anode-cathode spacing of 1500 ${\mu}m$.

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Representation Types of Gog and Magog in Old Western Maps (서양고지도에 나타난 곡과 마곡의 표현 유형)

  • Jung, In-Chul
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.45 no.1
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    • pp.165-183
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    • 2010
  • For the study of the development of Asia map made by european map makers, one should consider Gog and Magog which existed in the maps for more than 700 years. Gog and Magog are described as an apocalyptic people in the Bible and medieval literature, and they are important elements in medieval mappaemundi and early modem world maps. This study classified representation types of Gog and Magog in old western maps. Maps were classed in to six categories according to the location and ethnic groups which they represent, and they were discussed in cartographic context. The maps until the fourteenth century place Gog and Magog, shut up by Alexander, near Caspian Sea. In the fifteenth century, Gog and Magog were described as Closed Jews in maps. From the sixteenth century they appear in the far northeastern part of Asia and they are named as Amagog or Ung and Mongul. In the mid-seventeenth century, they are located in Eastern Siberia by French cartographers. But with the expansion of geographic knowledge, Gog and Magog disappeared completely in the eighteenth century. In general, God and Magog were represented on the basis of traditional lore rather than on the Bible, and they became one means of mapping others of European community.