Also
Important
To
Know
Atomic numbers
100

Type of scattered photons that have essentially the same energy as the incoming, or “incident,” photons.

What is small-angle scatter?

100

scatter interaction that occurs at energies less than 10 keV and between 1-50 kVp

What is Coherent (Classical, Thompson, elastic, unmodified) scatter?

100

by-product of photoelectric interactions

What is a photoelectron (characteristic photon)?

100

electron shell involved in Compton interactions

What are outer-shell electrons?

100

Aluminum

What is 13?

200

Additional, undesirable exposure of the IR from small-angle scatter that degrades the appearance of a completed radiographic image by blurring the sharp outlines of dense structures

What is radiographic fog?

200

formula to determine the energy of the photoelectron

What is the energy of the incident photon minus the binding energy of the electron shell?

200
electron shell typically involved in photoelectric interactions

What is K-shell?

200

two interactions that are of most significance in diagnostic radiography

What are photoelectric and compton scattering?

200

Barium

What is 56?

300

Primary method to reduced radiographic fog

What is collimation? 

*a.k.a limiting the amount of tissue irradiated*

300

two by-products of photoelectric absorption

What are photoelectrons and characteristic x-ray photons?

300

Interaction responsible for patient dose and contrast in the image

What is photoelectric absorption?

300

_________________ occurs as an electron from a higher shell drops down and fills the vacancy in the inner shell by releasing energy as a ___________ (2 part answer)

What is the characteristic cascade and a characteristic photon?

300

Lead

What is 82?

400

this energy transfer results in increased patient absorbed dose and does not contribute to the radiographic image

What are photoelectric interactions?

400

two variables that influence the probability of photoelectric absorption

What are the energy of the incident x-ray photons and the atomic number of the irradiated object?

400

simplest and best ways of reducing patient dose through technique adjustment

What is increase kVp?

This higher energy will lead to a slight but still acceptable lessening of image contrast because of a decrease in the amount of photoelectric interactions at the higher beam energy

400

the ejected outer-shell electron after Compton interactions is now called

What is Compton (secondary, recoil) electron?

400

Iodine

What is 53?

500

5 types of interactions between x-ray photons and matter

What are Coherent scattering, Photoelectric absorption, Compton scattering, Pair production, and Photodisintegration?

500

probability of photoelectric absorption increases as the energy of the incident photon ___________ and the atomic number of the irradiated atoms ____________

What is decreases and increases?

500

for equal thicknesses of bone and soft tissue, bone will absorb ____________ times as many x-ray photons as soft tissue in the diagnostic energy range

What is 13?

dependent on mass density and atomic number

bone is 2x as dense as soft tissue, would absorb twice as much radiation due to the density difference alone. 

bone would also absorb 6.5 times as much radiation because of the difference in effective atomic numbers since (13.8)^3 / (7.4)^3 = 6.5

Final probability: 6.5(Z#) x 2(density)=13

500

incident x-ray photon that surrendered some of its energy to free the loosely bound outer-shell electron from its orbit in Compton interactions continues on its way, but in a new direction, and is now called a

What is a Compton scattered photon?

500

Molybdenum

What is 42?

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