x-ray photographic film
21Digital versus film photography — has been a topic of debate since the invention of digital cameras towards the end of the 20th Century. Both digital and film photography have advantages and drawbacks.[1][2] 21st century photography is dominated by digital operation, but the… …
22X-ray crystallography — can locate every atom in a zeolite, an aluminosilicate with many important applications, such as water purification. X ray crystallography is a method of determining the arrangement of atoms within a crystal, in which a beam of X rays strikes a… …
23X-ray — radiograph a di*o*graph (r[=a] d[i^]*[ o]*gr[a^]f), n. [Radio + graph.] 1. An instrument for measuring and recording solar radiation. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] 2. An image or picture produced upon a sensitive surface, as of a photographic or… …
24X-ray photo — radiograph a di*o*graph (r[=a] d[i^]*[ o]*gr[a^]f), n. [Radio + graph.] 1. An instrument for measuring and recording solar radiation. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] 2. An image or picture produced upon a sensitive surface, as of a photographic or… …
25X ray — noun 1. electromagnetic radiation of short wavelength produced when high speed electrons strike a solid target (Freq. 6) • Syn: ↑X ray, ↑X radiation, ↑roentgen ray • Hypernyms: ↑electromagnetic radiation, ↑electromagnetic wave, ↑ …
26X-ray film — noun photographic film used to make X ray pictures (Freq. 1) • Hypernyms: ↑film, ↑photographic film • Hyponyms: ↑bitewing …
27nuclear photographic emulsion — ▪ physics also called Nuclear Emulsion, radiation (radiation measurement) detector generally in the form of a glass plate thinly coated with a transparent medium containing a silver halide compound. Passage of charged subatomic particles …
28X-ray photograph — noun a radiogram made by exposing photographic film to X rays; used in medical diagnosis • Syn: ↑roentgenogram, ↑X ray, ↑X ray, ↑X ray picture • Hypernyms: ↑radiogram, ↑radiograph, ↑shadowgraph, ↑ …
29X-ray crystallography — The use of X rays of known wavelength to learn the structure of any crystalline material. Put otherwise, X ray crystallography is a technology by which the locations of atoms in any crystal can be precisely mapped by looking at the image of the… …
30X-ray — 1. noun a) Short wavelength electromagnetic radiation usually produced by bombarding a metal target in a vacuum. Used to create images of the internal structure of objects; this is possible because X rays pass through most objects and can expose… …