X-Ray Production
Beam Properties
Interaction with Matter
Image Formation
Exposure Geometry
Heat and Equipment Safety
100

X-rays are produced when high-speed electrons strike this target material

Tungsten

100

A beam containing many different photon energies is described as this

Heterogeneous (polyenergetic)

100

When x-rays pass through matter without interaction, this occurs

Transmission

100

Areas where x-rays pass easily appear this color of a radiograph

Black (radiolucent)

100

Increasing source-to-object distance reduces this unwanted effect

Magnification

100

Most energy produced in the x-ray tube becomes this

Heat

200

The sudden deceleration of electrons that produces most dental x-rays is called this

Bremsstrahlung radiation

200

Low-energy photons that contribute to patient dose but not image quality are removed by this

Filtration

200

Complete absorption of an x-ray photon by matter is called this

Photoelectric absorption

200

Dense structures that block x-rays appear this

White (radiopaque)

200

Keeping the receptor parallel to the tooth minimizes this

Distortion

200

Material surrounding the tube that absorbs heat and radiation is called this

Insulating oil

300

Characteristic radiation occurs when an incoming electron ejects an electron from this part of the atom

Inner shell

300

Increasing kVp increases both the energy and this of the beam

Penetrating ability (or intensity)

300

Interaction that produces scattered radiation and reduces image contrast

Compton scatter

300

Teeth structures such as enamel are more radiopaque because they contain more of this element

Calcium

300

The central ray should strike the receptor at this angle for accurate images

Perpendicular (90 degrees)

300

The protective outer covering of the tube is known as this

Tube housing
400

Only about this small percentage of electron energy becomes x-rays; the rest becomes heat

About 1%
400

The central, most useful part of the x-ray beam is called this

Primary beam

400

Scattered radiation primarily travels in this general direction relative to the incoming beam

Forward direction

400

Soft tissues appear in shades of gray due to this level of absorption

Moderate absorption

400

Short target-receptor distance increases this problem

Magnification and blur

400

Continuous exposure without cooling can damage this component

X-ray tube

500

The rotating or stationary component that dissipates heat away rom the target is part of this electrode

Anode

500

Radiation that escapes from the tube housing in directions other than the primary beam is called this

Leakage radiation

500

The photoelectric effect is more likely with this type of photon energy

Low-energy photons

500

An object's density, thickness, and atomic number collectively determine this radiographic property

Radiopacity

500

The principle describing accurate shadow reproduction us known as this law

Shadow casting principle

500

Allowing time between exposures prevents overheating of this specific area

Tungsten target (anode focal spot)

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