Production of x-rays Flashcards
describe the filament cathode
- very fine wire made of tungsten
- small current passed along it 8-10mA
- electrons are excited
- wire gets hot - may give off light
- electrons are lost from outer shells/orbits round the nucleus
- electron cloud forms around the cathode
describe the anode
Small tungsten target embedded in copper Large potential difference between anode & cathode– e.g. 70kV -ve electrons bombard +ve anode High energy electrons come to sudden stop ordecelerate & energy form changes 99% HEAT 1% X-RAYS
what are the 2 types of x-ray spectra?
1) continuous spectrum
2) characteristic spectrum
describe continuous spectrum
- bremsstrahlung (Bremsstrahlung is a very well-known physical phenomenon, used, for example, in any type of radiology equipment. When an electron or a beta particle passes through matter, it slows down, and a fraction of its energy is directly converted into X-rays) or breaking radiation
- wide range of photon energies
describe characteristic spectrum
- depends on material used in anode
- emitted by loss of electrons from K & L shells
describe continuous spectrum further
Wide range of photon energies Small deflections are most common – many lowenergy photons Little penetrating power – need filtering out Large deflections less likely – few high energyphotons Maximum photon energy directly related to kVacross the x-ray tube
describe characteristic spectrum further
Characteristic of anode atom – tungsten Line spectra relating to K and L shells K lines of diagnostic importance with photon energylevels of 58 – 69.5kV (L lines are less than 10kV) X-ray tube needs to be operating above 69.5kV
describe scattering
random change in direction after hitting something
describe absorption
deposition of energy in tissues
describe intensity
number of x-ray photons in a defined area of the beam
describe attenuation
reduction in intensity of beam due to scattering & absorption
describe ionisation
removal of electron from neutral atom to give electron & positive ions
describe penetration
the ability of photons to pass through or into tissues/materials
what are x-ray interactions?
- completely scattered with no loss of energy
- absorbed with total loss of energy
- scattered with some absorption & loss of energy
- transmitted unchanged
describe the properties of x-rays 1
- travel in straight lines in free space
- x-ray photons form a divergent beam
- can travel through a vacuum
- penetrate matter
- can be absorbed
- can be scattered