1 / 13

Radiology part 1: x-ray

Radiology part 1: x-ray. Dr Haddadi, PhD, MSc Assistant prof. of Medical Physics Fassa University of Medical Sciences. Electromagnetic radiation. Any charge in motion induces magnetic field X-ray is a part of electromagnetic (EM) energy spectrum.

tavia
Download Presentation

Radiology part 1: x-ray

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiologypart 1: x-ray Dr Haddadi, PhD, MSc Assistant prof. of Medical Physics Fassa University of Medical Sciences

  2. Electromagnetic radiation • Any charge in motion induces magnetic field • X-ray is a part of electromagnetic (EM) energy spectrum

  3. Photons are part of the electromagnetic spectrum Visible light Infrared X-rays & Gamma rays Radio UV Enough energy to cause ionization

  4. The Electromagnetic Spectrum

  5. EM properties • EM radiation propagates as a wave characterized by: - electric field - magnetic field - dielectric constant, and - electromagnetic properties of the medium • Wave length: distance of one complete cycle, λ, • Period: time for one cycle, T, and T=1/f Tc= λ and f λ=c c; 3 x 108 m/sec

  6. Sinusoidal EM wave • For a monochromatic radiation: - Magnetic and electric fields are functions of time, t, and space, x: Ф(x,t)= Ф0 cos(ωt – kx) Ф; electric field, ω=2πƒ; angular frequency, and k=2π/λ; for wave number • Ф(x,t) is a special form of the solution to the wave equation: c= (1/με)-1/2, μ is permeability of the medium and ε is permittivity of the medium

  7. EM properties cont’d • The main difference between X-ray and light or radio waves: frequency or wavelength (100-0.01 nm) • Dual characteristics of X-radiation: wave and particle interpretation of X- or gamma radiation Louis de Broglie equation (1924): λ = h/mv

  8. The wave concept to explain: • Phenomena: - reflection - scattering - refraction - diffraction

  9. Properties of X-Radiation as a particle: • Traveling at a speed of light; c • Carrying an energy given by; E=hfh;Planck constant (4.13 x 10-18 keV-sec, 1 ev= 1.6 x 10-19 joules) • These particles are called quanta, or photon • Photons are capable of ionizing atoms and molecules, so called ionizing radiation

  10. Classification of Indirectly IonizingPhoton Radiation Four distinct groups of photons ********** • Characteristic (fluorescent) x raysresult from electron transitions between atomic shells • Bremsstrahlungphotonsresult from electron-nucleus Coulomb interactions • Gamma raysresult from nuclear transitions • Annihilation quantaresult from positron-electron annihilation

  11. Characteristicx-ray

  12. Bremsstrahlungphotons

  13. Annihilation quanta

More Related