Patents by Inventor Jiri Tomka

Jiri Tomka has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7715611
    Abstract: In order to check the authenticity of a banknote or other such document it is printed with two patches of magnetisable ink, and each patch is magnetised to present a multipole sequence of alternating polarity. If the document is folded to bring the two patches together and then rubbed to and fro in the direction of the pole sequences, they will be subject to alternating forces of attraction and repulsion which can be sensed through the fingertips and gives the impression of a physically rippled texture notwithstanding that the patches actually have a smooth surface. The presence or absence of this effect can therefore be used to distinguish between a genuine document bearing such magnetised patches and a counterfeit which may be visually identical but lacks the correct magnetisation. In a variant only one of the patches is printed on the document itself and the other is on a separate “key” device which is rubbed over it to test for the presence of the correct magnetisation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 19, 2004
    Date of Patent: May 11, 2010
    Assignee: Qinetiq Limited
    Inventors: Stuart John Eaton, Jonathan Geoffrey Gore, Christopher Robert Lawrence, George Jiri Tomka, Adam Daykin
  • Patent number: 6910384
    Abstract: A stress or magnetic field sensor comprising a generally elongate magnetically soft amorphous or nanocrystalline electrically resistive element and biasing means for applying to the element a bias magnetic field of which the component directed along the length of the sensor has an amplitude variation pattern along the element. A periodically varying pattern has the effect of reducing the sensitivity of a stress sensor to external ambient fields (FIG. 3 shows that with a sawtooth bias field the sensitive portions a of a sensor move to positions b in the presence of an ambient field, but their number remains the same). A ramped bias field enables the position of the sensitive region of the sensor to be controlled, for measuring local stress, or for mapping an external magnetic field. Control of the regions where the sensor is active may include selective conductive coating of portions of its length.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 20, 2002
    Date of Patent: June 28, 2005
    Assignee: QuinetiQ Limited
    Inventors: George Jiri Tomka, Jonathan Geoffrey Gore, Mark Gregory Maylin, James Carl Milne
  • Publication number: 20040103725
    Abstract: A stress or magnetic field sensor comprises a generally elongate magnetically soft amorphous or nanocrystalline electrically resistive element and biasing means for applying to the element a bias magnetic field of which the component directed along the length of the sensor has an amplitude variation pattern along the element. A periodically varying pattern has the effect of reducing the sensitivity of a stress sensor to external ambient fields (FIG. 3 shows that with a sawtooth bias field the sensitive portions a of a sensor move to positions b in the presence of an ambient field, but their number remains the same). A ramped bias field enables the position of the sensitive region of the sensor to be controlled, for measuring local stress, or for mapping an external magnetic field. Control of the regions where the sensor is active may include selective conductive coating of portions of its length.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 22, 2003
    Publication date: June 3, 2004
    Inventors: George Jiri Tomka, Jonathan Geoffrey Gore, Mark Gregory Maylin, James Carl Milne
  • Patent number: 4237034
    Abstract: Method for producing improved nucleating agent systems for polyamides comprising intimately blending a combination of a metal salt of saturated or unsaturated carboxylic acids or a metal oxide or a metal hydroxide and an organophosphonic acid with a polyamide under melt conditions.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 6, 1976
    Date of Patent: December 2, 1980
    Assignee: Imperial Chemical Industries Limited
    Inventors: Jiri Tomka, Jack M. Ginn