The Basics
Ion-tastic
Ion-olicious
Making Photons
Radioactivity
100

The speed of light is constant and always the product of these two numbers that characterize electromagnetic radiation

What is frequency and wavelength?

100

Radiation can be characterized in two ways: one way is ionizing radiation, and the other is this type of radiation.

What is non-ionizing radiation?

100

In addition to photons, this neutral particle can indirectly ionize and excite material.

What are neutrons?

100

To make photons via brehmsstrahlung, you must accelerate electrons from a cathode to this.

What is an anode (or target)?

100

This is the old, non SI, unit for quantifying radioactivity. 

What is a Curie?

200

An electromagnetic field can be created when simultaneously changing these things.

What is an electric field or magnetic field?

200

This type of photon scattering with an atom retains the original energy of the photon, but redirects it.

What is Rayliegh or coherent scattering?

200

Brehmsstrahlung only happens when a fast-moving electron becomes deflected by this object in an atom.

What is (the electric field) of a nucleus?

200
Radiation Dose is the amount of energy absorbed per (this quantity).

What is mass?

200

This "type of life" is the time required for the activity to decay to half its original value.

What is half-life?

300

The term used to describe the physical distance (or length) between the peaks of an electromagnetic wave.

What is wavelength?

300

This type of photon scattering with an atomic electron becomes completely absorbed by the atom. It does, however, release a unique photon beam energy or a (Meitner) electron.

What is the Photoelectric Effect?

300

The most dominant photon interaction for radiation beams with energies most commonly observed in x-ray CT imaging and radiotherapy.

What is the Compton Effect?

300

This radio-isotope was (and is) used to generate high-energy radiation beams that have a skin-sparing effect.

What is Cobalt-60

300

The decay constant and the half-life are related by this constant.

What is Ln(2)  or 0.693?

400

The letter used to characterize the number protons in an atom. 

What is Z?

400

Compton scattering results in these two particles leaving an atom.

What is a (lower energy) photon and an electron?

400

Of elastic or inelastic collisions, this one is like billiard ball collisions with electrons.

What are elastic collisions?

400
This is what FFF stands for.

What is Flattening Filter Free?

400

A gamma decay results in the ejection of this kind of particle from the nucleus.

What is a photon?

500

After he won the Nobel Prize in Physics, Niels Bohr reconfigured plumbing in his house so that he could have a direct connection to a pub that provided this kind of fluid.

What is beer?

500

Pair production cannot happen unless the energy of the photon is equal to or greater than two times the mass of this type of particle.

What is an electron?

500

This type of photon interactions results in 3 newly created particles.

What is triplet production?

500

An incredibly useful rule of thumb for electron beams is that for every 2 MeV of energy, the distance the electron looses most of its energy is this distance.

What is 1 cm?

500

An alpha decay results in the ejection of these particles.

What is an alpha particle, or He+2? (i.e., 2 protons + 2 neutrons)

M
e
n
u