View allAll Photos Tagged XRay
I broke my left hand a couple of days ago during a snowboard session in Austria. It doesn't seems so bad cause I can't see anything on the Xray scan that the doctor gave me.
The good news is that I can still type with my right hand... An maybe even take a picture or two.
:-|
Multigrade b/w paper exposed in analytical Xray box, object placed directly on the paper.
varying exposure of 25-50 kV tube voltage, from 1 to 4 minutes.
This woman came to my room with a big portable Xray machine. Before removing the big tubes that went into my chest, the doctors wanted to be sure that all was well inside. All was well, and I came home the next day.
This woman was typical of the staff: cheerful, friendly, competent, and kind.
It's difficult to see (as the scan did not come out very well) but this is the xray of Charlie's rear left leg, which he broke in 3 places on Friday 15th May. We are still none the wiser as to how it happened. He has had to undergo surgery to insert metal rods and pins to reapir the damage.
Một đêm hứng khởi với film xray. Lần đi off này chụp 8 âm bản, density hơi cao nhưng coi khá hơn lần trước. Lần trước chụp với asa 25-50 nên film ra quá tối, mất chi tiết vùng tối khá nhiều. Lần này rút kinh nghiệm, cùng 1 địa điểm set asa còn 12 nên hình ra quá tốt. 8 phát lấy được 7, trong đó 1 phát quá tối, lần tới sẽ để ý cái lens Voigt mới được.
2 weeks.
Apparently a scaphoid fracture, not that I can spot it.
Disappointed I don't have MRI data to play with!
Radiograph of thumb arthritis showing bone spurs and near dislocation of the worn out CMC joint of the thumb.
In this photo from 2004, now-former Sandian Isidro Molina, left, and Gene Ormond check over Cygnus. The dual-axis flash X-ray radiography system, which was designed by Sandia and is located at the Nevada National Security Site, has fired its 3,000th shot.
Learn more at 1.usa.gov/1N9TemH.
Photo by Randy Montoya.
Derek Ziska, left, and Dan Nielsen stand on the pulse-forming line platform to check the magnetic core reset mechanism on the RITS-6 cavities as Advanced Radiographic Technologies manager Mark Kiefer looks on from the walkway above. RITS-6, a flash X-ray source, has operated for about a decade and recently fired its 2,000th shot.
Learn more at 1.usa.gov/1N9TemH.
Photo by Randy Montoya.
I took an Xray of a seashell, copied that on a lightbox with several blue filters with positive film, then scanned in the film.
2 weeks.
Apparently a scaphoid fracture, not that I can spot it.
Disappointed I don't have MRI data to play with!