X-Ray Production & Generators
Beam Intensity & Quality
Matter Interactions
Contrast & Tissue Dynamics
Hodgepodge
100

As electrons accelerate from the cathode to the anode, their high potential energy is fully converted into this type of energy.

What is kinetic energy?

100

This law dictates that doubling your Source-to-Image Distance (SID) will reduce the X-ray intensity reaching the receptor to exactly one-fourth of its original value

What is the Inverse Square Law?

100

This low-energy interaction occurs when an X-ray photon is deflected by an atom without losing any energy or causing ionization.

What is coherent (or classical/Thomson) scattering?

100

Negative contrast agents like air or carbon dioxide create structural contrast on a radiograph due to this physical property

What is being less dense (lower physical density and lower atomic number) than surrounding tissues?

100

This process is defined as the spontaneous emission of energy or particles from an unstable atomic nucleus.

What is radioactivity?

200

This formula determines the total heat units (HU) generated during a standard single-phase fluoroscopic exposure.

What is $\text{kVp} \times \text{mA} \times \text{time (seconds)}$?

200

This mathematical relationship describes how the total intensity (quantity) of the X-ray beam changes when a radiographer strictly alters the kVp setting.

What is proportional to the square of the kVp? IntensityXkVp^2

200

This interaction involves an incoming photon colliding with an outer-shell electron, ejecting it as a recoil electron and creating the primary source of diagnostic scatter.

What is Compton scattering?

200

At standard diagnostic energies, bone produces significantly higher radiographic contrast than soft tissue primarily due to this interaction type.

What is photoelectric absorption?

200

While technically identical in wave behavior, X-rays and gamma rays differ entirely based on this property.

(Gamma rays come from the nucleus; X-rays come from electron shell interactions).

300

This specific type of generator produces more efficient X-rays per mAs than a single-phase generator, resulting in lower patient dose for equivalent receptor exposure.

What is a high-frequency generator?

300

This specific metric describes the exact thickness of aluminum required to cut the primary X-ray beam's exposure rate perfectly in half.

What is the Half-Value Layer (HVL)?

300

This interaction cannot occur within standard diagnostic radiography because it requires a threshold photon energy of at least 1.02 MeV.

What is pair production?

300

Barium ($Z=56$) appears dramatically more opaque (white) on an image than an identical concentration of Iodine ($Z=53$) at the same kVp because of this atomic property.

What is a higher atomic number Z?

300

An atom's chemical identity and atomic number Z are entirely determined by the count of these positive subatomic particles. 

What are protons?

400

This transformer rule determines the exact number of secondary turns required when given the primary turns, primary voltage, and a target high voltage (kVp).

What is the Transformer Law? Vs/Vp =Ns/Np

400

These "useless," low-energy photons (typically below 15 keV) are intentionally removed from the diagnostic beam to lower patient skin dose.

What is soft radiation (or low-energy/long-wavelength X-rays)?

400

This extreme interaction requires high-energy gamma rays above 10 MeV to directly enter the nucleus and eject a nuclear fragment.

What is photodisintegration?

400

This clinical mechanism is the primary reason why a Compton recoil electron poses a risk to patients during an exam.

What is depositing kinetic energy into local tissue (contributing to patient radiation dose)?

400

This algebraic formula is used to calculate the absolute maximum capacity of electrons any given shell can hold.

What is 2n^2

500

This phenomenon limits the maximum X-ray tube output at very low kVp settings, causing a plateau despite an abundance of available thermionic electrons.

What is the space charge effect?

500

If a radiographer simultaneously doubles the mAs and heavily increases the beam filtration, this is the net effect on the beam's overall intensity and average energy.

What is an increase in beam quality (average energy) while the net intensity (quantity) may remain relatively stable or change depending on the exact filtration thickness?

500

As kVp is increased from a low setting to a high setting (e.g., 60 to 100 kVp), this happens to the relative proportion of photoelectric interactions compared to Compton interactions.

  • What is a decrease? (The proportion of Compton scattering increases relative to photoelectric absorption).

500

This mechanical or digital technique is the most effective way to eliminate scattered photons from reaching the image receptor without modifying the primary beam's initial intensity

What is using a radiographic grid (or collimation)?

500

This specific structural term describes atoms that share the exact same number of protons but differ in their neutron count.

What are isotopes?