X Rays - A Level Physics

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • A basic description of the production of X rays for medical use in remote sensing. Part of the A Level Physics revision series.

Komentáře • 169

  • @tpodan79
    @tpodan79 Před 11 lety +5

    You explain so clearly in 18 minutes what took my teacher 50 minutes to explain and I still didn't get it. Thank you for an excellent explanation!

  • @jacktoholke6378
    @jacktoholke6378 Před 7 lety +93

    Thank you so much! Very well X-plained!

    • @AS-qi2lq
      @AS-qi2lq Před 3 lety +1

      I see what you did there.

  • @bikermoofrommars5922
    @bikermoofrommars5922 Před 11 lety +3

    I'm a dental nurse studying for my radiography qualification and have been struggling with understanding some areas of physics. Just wanted to say how amazing this video is, and I'll be watching on repeat and taking revision notes from this ( aswell as my textbook of course!). Thanks so much

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 10 lety +7

    Thank you for your very kind comments. I'm very glad that it helped.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety +9

    In general ionisation means that an electron has been knocked out of an atom so that the atom is positively charged (ionized). Excitation means that the electron has been pushed up to a higher energy level (but still within the atom). The atom still has all its electrons and is not ionised. But the excited electron will soon fall back to a lower energy level emitting a photon.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 12 lety +1

    Hi Jake - Thanks for your kind comments. I would be very happy to do the videos you suggest but I'm afraid I cant do them in time for Monday and probably not for another week or so. But good luck in your exam. I hope it goes well.

  • @MrKb7373
    @MrKb7373 Před 11 lety +1

    Good simple explanation and useful practical/clinical tips. Just to correct one mistake DrPhysicsA in your explanation from 14:15 to 14:35, when x-rays strike the radiographic film it is blackened, not whitened or grayed. That is why the shadow of bone on the radiograph appears white or grey because the x-rays are attenuated by the dense bone. However the soft tissues do not stop the x-rays at all from penetrating hence that part of the radiographic film appears black.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety +1

    Yes. There is the braking radiation. But the main X rays come from high energy electrons knocking electrons from the inner shells of the anode. Outer shell electrons can then fall down the energy level to take the space vacated by the electron. This fall in energy is released as a photon - in this case in the X ray wavelength range.

  • @anikasanjana6912
    @anikasanjana6912 Před 9 lety +2

    This is so amazing! These explanations follow the exact contents which are in the application booklet, also maintaining the serial. Loved it!

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety +3

    My A Level Physics revision playlist has videos on Gravitation and Electricity, both of which refer to the inverse square law for Newton's or Coulomb's laws.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 10 lety +2

    Where x-rays are produced as a result of electrons falling from outer energy levels to inner energy levels then this will be a constant process because energy is constantly being given to the atom to enable electrons to jump up to the higher energy levels in the first place.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    Ionisation is where the energy given to the electron (eg from a photon) is sufficient to kick the electron completely out of the atom. The atom therefore has a residual positive charge. Excitation is where the photon gives enough energy to promote the electron to a higher energy level but still in the atom.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety +2

    Thanks. Nice to know its recommended by your professor.

  • @a7med4s
    @a7med4s Před 10 lety +1

    Perfect presentation,perfect demonestration
    I am so happy to watch this
    DrPhysicsA you are simply incredible

  • @valdemirpelegrinello7149
    @valdemirpelegrinello7149 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing explanation clearly and easy to understanding. Thank You so much

  • @NWin86
    @NWin86 Před 11 lety

    Thank Dr for uploaded this kind of professional lecture. It help me a lot.

  • @ilaydamumcuoglu8339
    @ilaydamumcuoglu8339 Před 3 lety

    finally I understood how x-rays work thank you so much for this amazing video

  • @JennyCheng0102
    @JennyCheng0102 Před 11 lety +1

    i learned so much in your video! biomedical imaging is making sense now! thank you!

  • @benjamincharles5492
    @benjamincharles5492 Před 6 lety

    WOW! This is the best explanation of X-Rays...!! Thank you!

  • @Mufti199
    @Mufti199 Před 8 lety +8

    U, my friend, are a life saver

  • @jakerichardson625
    @jakerichardson625 Před 12 lety +1

    Hi
    I'm an A Level student and I have my AQA unit 5 exam on Monday, I find your videos so helpful. I learn more after watching them than I've learnt in all my lessons on those topics.
    If you have time would you be able to do some videos on other Medical Physics topics? such as the eye, ear, and heart?
    This is the stuff on my syllabus, if you could make a video on anything on here it would be extremely helpful!

  • @annagute7681
    @annagute7681 Před 9 lety

    The best x-ray explanation ever, THE BEST !

  • @1002em
    @1002em Před 12 lety +2

    this is ridiculously helpful. thank you so much for these videos!

  • @IMrNuminous
    @IMrNuminous Před 11 lety

    Glad I found these in time for my G485 exam, really good explanation.
    Feels like im getting a physics lecture off bruce forsyth :)

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    Thanks. In my efforts to show where the X rays would penetrate and where they wouldn't I didn't properly cover their impact on the photographic plate. I've added an annotation.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    How kind. Glad it was of some help. All good wishes for your studies.

  • @andresjimenez3026
    @andresjimenez3026 Před 7 lety +1

    Excellent video, has a wonderfully concise explanation.

  • @jakerichardson625
    @jakerichardson625 Před 12 lety

    Thanks anyway!
    Most of your videos cover most of the stuff, and have really made a difference for me.
    Thanks again

  • @danielholden6849
    @danielholden6849 Před 10 lety +8

    Thankyou for the great video, it really did help!
    I am just slightly confused with the graph. You said that were the minimum wavelength are seen high energy x-rays occur. On the y-axis there is intensity, so does that mean the x-rays produced on the left side of the graph have an high energy but low intensity?

  • @Marimari-ev6rr
    @Marimari-ev6rr Před 3 lety

    I have my physics exam in a fee hours and I'm just watching this rn , lovely , but thank you sir for explaining everything in such a superb way !

  • @vidulanarampanawa2540
    @vidulanarampanawa2540 Před 3 lety

    My ideal teacher of physics

  • @EllieGouldingFan
    @EllieGouldingFan Před 12 lety

    I have the same exam on Monday - thank you so much for these videos!
    Good luck for Monday everyone! :)

  • @vicky.medrano
    @vicky.medrano Před 6 lety

    Best comprehensive explanation I've found. Thanks so much!! Just one critique; video quality ;)

    • @syed5126
      @syed5126 Před 6 lety

      Vicky Medrano its was made in 2012 what do you expect?

  • @ericpupek9044
    @ericpupek9044 Před 6 lety +2

    watched a ton of videos on x rays and sorry to say their are a ton of really bad Physics teachers out there, BUT your videos was awesome. Thank you I HIGHLY recommend.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 12 lety

    Thanks. HIgh and low energy photons will enter the body but low energy X rays will be wholly absorbed and not appear on the photographic plate. High energy will be attenuated but will still pass thro the body. So low energy X rays add to the overall dose but for no worthwhile effect.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    My videos certainly cover the OCR syllabus but they all so cover material in the AQA and Edexcel syllabus as well as some material in the Cambridge syllabus.

  • @floridanews8786
    @floridanews8786 Před rokem

    Beautiful explanation!

  • @thecontroller6786
    @thecontroller6786 Před 7 lety

    Great video!! Thank you so much for your explanation... All of your vids are all well-explained.

  • @xxxreptilianxxx
    @xxxreptilianxxx Před 10 lety +2

    This is really useful! This is also GCSE physics by the way, you may choose to change the key terms so others can find it!

  • @gautomdas9172
    @gautomdas9172 Před 11 lety

    Very very good one . just love it.

  • @nadalcathe3436
    @nadalcathe3436 Před 11 lety

    No i searched for linear attenuation coefficient for X-ray but didn't get what I was looking for. But with attenuation coefficient i got it on wikipedia. Thanks Sir.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    Thanks. Nice to have it explained.

  • @leeannhunt9122
    @leeannhunt9122 Před 3 lety

    Wonderful explanation! This was super helpful!

  • @rucksapps
    @rucksapps Před 11 lety

    Tungsten has a high electron density and, when hit by the electrons coming from the cathode, emits a characteristic x-ray, in that the waves have a high enough frequency and therefore, enough energy to penetrate the aluminium plate covering the tube and thus, enough energy to penetrate the bone etc to reach the lead (less penetrable material to absorb the photons)...

  • @reshamregmi272
    @reshamregmi272 Před 5 lety

    Thank you very much DrPhysicsA. It was very beneficial for me to learn physics in conceptual way. I think it would have been better if we can get your video in HD too.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    I'm stumped on that one I'm afraid. I guess the answer has to do with the technology and which element best provides the Xrays which are most suitable for medical purposes. But I could be wrong. Anyone else know?

  • @razamate
    @razamate Před 12 lety

    That was a really good explanation of xrays! Thank you very much!

  • @ibrahimawadallah
    @ibrahimawadallah Před 11 lety

    Helpful video. Thanks.
    I suggest you use high resolution camera, and a better lighting.

  • @nooli72
    @nooli72 Před 11 lety

    My professor recommanded your video. thanks for great video.

  • @akshatasurati5448
    @akshatasurati5448 Před rokem

    Precise and perfect

  • @moyrml
    @moyrml Před 11 lety

    that last part got me thinking about orthographic projection. is that grating essentially creating an ortho look? if it does then, is it possible to create an ortho-lens in that manner to attach to a regular (visible-light) camera?
    btw, great video, thank you!

  • @MrKb7373
    @MrKb7373 Před 11 lety

    You can add this correction as tag to your video for those minutes. [Reference: 'Nature of the radiographic image', pg. 3, Essentials of Dental Radiography and Radiology by Eric Whaites, 4th edition.]

  • @emu98391
    @emu98391 Před 10 lety

    You did a nice job! I think it will be help to review this when I study.

  • @streamleazefishhouse
    @streamleazefishhouse Před 8 lety

    Awesome! I'm marking level 3 Btech course work and I'm a biologist...... Thank you!!!!!

  • @amanial-khalifa5299
    @amanial-khalifa5299 Před 9 lety +2

    Excellent. Thank you!

  • @TheBassHeavy
    @TheBassHeavy Před 4 lety

    Very well explained! Thank you!

  • @PaiigeeYeaah
    @PaiigeeYeaah Před 11 lety

    Ahhh everything makes so much more sense now! A big thank you to you!!!! :)

  • @likiliki6635
    @likiliki6635 Před 2 lety

    The video sound is pretty good, beyond my imagination

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    Which A Level syllabus are you following?

  • @DarkLevis
    @DarkLevis Před 12 lety

    Your welcome.
    I understand this but I assume there's a deeper reason to this. I'm guessing that low energy photons 'frequency' causes some interaction (resonace?) with molecules more easily that high 'frequency' does. Or is it just explain cause high freuquency photons pass due to having more energy(as some being absorbed but even few which pass leave a mark on plate) or even some other way?
    Thanks a lot!

  • @twchen0402
    @twchen0402 Před 11 lety

    Dear DrPhysicsA:
    From the video, are you meaning the x-ray generation from the acceleration of electron beams is equivalent to that from the energy transition of the outer shell back into the inner shell. They are of the same, but different pictures. right ?

  • @bostaphkatya
    @bostaphkatya Před 9 lety

    Excellent! thank you so much for your explanation!

  • @FakeDeath02
    @FakeDeath02 Před 10 lety +2

    This was very helpful thanks for the video

  • @Spirit-Consciousness
    @Spirit-Consciousness Před 11 lety

    Aweeeeeeeeeeeesomeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee videeoooooo ....
    u r the best physics teacher :) (y)
    subscribed..!

  • @confusion3146
    @confusion3146 Před 2 lety

    I just have a few questions, does the rotor part of the anode also rotate along with the disc? Which part of the mechanism actually controls the tube current, is it the tube part of the cathode or the thermionic filament? Also, the anode is the positive part but does this refer specifically to the disc of the anode or the rotor that's positive to attract the electrons?

  • @twchen0402
    @twchen0402 Před 11 lety

    I am sort of confused. So the braking radiation and inner shell electron transition are two different mechanisms. The latter is the usual way to generate x-ray. Right? and does the electron acceleration inside the CRT(cathode ray tube) create some long-wavelength x-ray or just the ultra-violet radiation ?

  • @hamnachaudhary4657
    @hamnachaudhary4657 Před 5 lety

    You explained really well.

  • @DrPhysicsA
    @DrPhysicsA  Před 11 lety

    Have you looked at "Attenuation coefficient" on Wikipedia?

  • @soliltary
    @soliltary Před 11 lety

    Thnx for providing knowledge to people like us

  • @drsheikh
    @drsheikh Před 7 lety

    Excellent commentary.

  • @jasonbellamy9759
    @jasonbellamy9759 Před 6 lety

    This is fantastic - thank you so much!!!!!

  • @AutumnInsane123
    @AutumnInsane123 Před 11 lety

    it would be good if you can explain in further details of the use of the materials alongside with the description of the x-ray tube , e.g.why is tungsten used. Just a suggestion to your future videos (maybe?)

  • @fionaboogeywoogey
    @fionaboogeywoogey Před 5 lety

    @14:25. The resultant image would be WHITE not BLACK. If x-rays are NOT penetrating the bone it means they are instead being absorbed. So then there is no 'exposure ' to the photographic plate/film behind the bone so it remains white. .. The 'black' in an image shows where the x-rays HAVE penetrated the object thus have exposed the medium (film) behind it. - Other than that great video - thanks.

  • @rustyjeanz
    @rustyjeanz Před 8 lety

    very nicely explained. Thanks a lot :)

  • @biajidejajchowdhury1058
    @biajidejajchowdhury1058 Před 10 lety

    Thank you professor, it's a great lecture.

  • @fraumann7922
    @fraumann7922 Před 10 lety +8

    the man doesn't have arms ._.
    otherwise a really good video! helped me a lot!

    • @Chiko-sc1gz
      @Chiko-sc1gz Před 5 lety +1

      They are maybe amputated and he went to the doctor for a follow up

  • @shakirbaba6765
    @shakirbaba6765 Před 6 lety

    Best explanation.. love it

  • @samb18_kite
    @samb18_kite Před 7 lety +1

    what happens to the electron when it delivers all its energy to radiation. zero kinetic energy implies it comes to a stop. But how is that possible?

  • @DarkLevis
    @DarkLevis Před 12 lety

    Very very nice video
    But why high energy photons penetrate body but low frequenzy ones not?

  • @adarshk19
    @adarshk19 Před 11 lety

    Hello awesome video that complemented my textbook and brought life to the application section of my physics course. Is there a video about the attenuation of X-rays? Like where we use the formula to fine resultant intensity and so on? thanks

  • @Missamytta
    @Missamytta Před 8 lety

    Awesome explanation! Thank you :)

  • @pynewill
    @pynewill Před 11 lety

    Great video, but what about X-ray attenuation and image intensifiers, also contrast media and CAT scans are in the textbook

  • @stervi2
    @stervi2 Před 11 lety

    What would happen if an incident electron didn't make a head on collision with one of the tungsten electrons but got very close? would it excite the tungsten electron and that would then emit a photon when it falls back down to its original energy level? if so, would it emit x-rays?

  • @themrworf1701
    @themrworf1701 Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks! You explained a lot!

  • @ibrahimnazemqader9153
    @ibrahimnazemqader9153 Před 5 lety +1

    great ...
    دەستت خۆش بێت

  • @MsSergey1313
    @MsSergey1313 Před 8 lety

    A excellent lesson! Thank you!

  • @cusshoe
    @cusshoe Před 9 lety

    Excellent video...

  • @nas_kabir
    @nas_kabir Před 10 lety

    Dear DrPhysicsA, this is a great presentation. But something worrying me ,The lead gratings at 17.00, will also be shown in the Films? that will obstruct with the image of interest. ? kindly clarify

    • @suppandi1000
      @suppandi1000 Před 10 lety

      The lead gratings are long but sufficiently thin

  • @rustyjeanz
    @rustyjeanz Před 8 lety

    +DrPhysicsA
    Dear Dr. I got one question. At 14:00 why you draw the X Rays emerging from Anode not straight lines but around 15:00 you draw straight lines that are emerging from anode. Is this because the samples are bone and soft tissues respectively? If yes , but how do the X Rays know whats the sample. So Can you explain both cases considering the same straight lines emerging? Thanks

  • @hartwiggrant4263
    @hartwiggrant4263 Před 10 lety

    I like this video, it helps a lot. Good Job, thanks...

  • @shaneellal1086
    @shaneellal1086 Před 7 lety

    This is very useful, thank you.

  • @zatulmutalif3230
    @zatulmutalif3230 Před 11 lety

    sir how do we know whether the x ray image produces a good contrast??the question that i did, the answer talk about the ratio of I°/I but i dont understand...

  • @YaduPoudel
    @YaduPoudel Před 11 lety

    Thank you. Your voice is amazing

  • @Montymylie1
    @Montymylie1 Před 11 lety

    Is ionisation when the x-rays are made and exitation when the are the body?

  • @weakwok3550
    @weakwok3550 Před 11 lety

    why the electron accelerates round the nucleus release x-ray photon?

  • @xiaosun9111
    @xiaosun9111 Před rokem

    if you cover an alu plate to filter out the "weak" photons, the rest of the photons would also get attenuated by the plate, right, thus "strong" photons will become "weak" and the problem is still there???

  • @rdgrim1
    @rdgrim1 Před 11 lety

    isent it something to do with the distance between nuclei (diameter of nuclei 10 to the -10) being smaller then the low energy photons (E inversely proportional to Wavelength) so a photon with wavelength greater then 10 to the -10 will be absorbed by the atoms...

  • @sameerprajapati2964
    @sameerprajapati2964 Před 9 lety

    thnx atlast i understood it ur a nice mentor

  • @kevinmun1
    @kevinmun1 Před 11 lety

    Sir, I would like to ask.Like what you mentioned, high speed electron will hit the electron from the tungsten atom. And then the outer electron will jump into the inner shell to replace it. Energy lost is the X-Ray. After outer electron fall into the inner shell, The more outer electron, I mean will others electron replace the jumping electron? will X -ray produce also?

  • @maiprue
    @maiprue Před 8 lety

    Hi Dr Physics A,, I'm confused.How can an electron being accelerated and at the same time losing energy(@min 4:15)?Also, it seems that accelerating and decelerating charges both emit radiation. When you said accelerating charges radiate light, do you mean that 1.the light is being radiated while the charges are being accelerated? or 2. (after the acceleration process is over) charges then decelerate and light is emitted as a result? To me, decelerating charges emit radiation makes sense but radiation is emitted while charges are being accelerated does not. Can you explain this in term of conservation of energy if that's possible? Thanks very much.