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      • It was difficult to use x-rays in medicine before 1913 due to the high amount of voltage necessary for adequate images, which would often result in the source x-ray tube breaking down. In 1913, Coolidge designed a high vacuum x-ray tube that could serve as an intense and reliable source.
      www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0741521410017271
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  2. Jul 19, 2024 · The discovery of X-rays – a form of invisible radiation that can pass through objects, including human tissue – revolutionised science and medicine in the late 19th century. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1845-1923), a German scientist, discovered X-rays or Röntgen rays in November 1895.

    • Kim Martins
  3. X-rays have a big disadvantage: they portray the three-dimensional body as flat. All the structures are superimposed. One invention will change this and lay the foundation for modern...

  4. May 26, 2024 · In the early days of X-ray use, many doctors and technicians were exposed to high levels of radiation without proper protection, leading to a range of health problems, including skin burns, hair loss, and even cancer.

  5. Jan 1, 2011 · It was difficult to use x-rays in medicine before 1913 due to the high amount of voltage necessary for adequate images, which would often result in the source x-ray tube breaking down. In 1913, Coolidge designed a high vacuum x-ray tube that could serve as an intense and reliable source.

    • Amy B. Reed
    • 2011
  6. Jul 16, 2015 · X-rays in the context of the First World War were principally used to identify foreign metal lodged in the body. Reading the samples of medical registers it is not surprising this...

  7. Oct 26, 2016 · It is very difficult to put oneself into the position of someone living in the 19th century prior to the discovery of X-rays (in 1895) and radioactivity (in 1896). The early scientists had a certainty and confidence that is alien to our contemporary worldview.

  8. Feb 18, 2020 · Today we call his invention the fluoroscope. In 1913, William Coolidge invented the Coolidge vacuum tube. These tubes create continuous X-ray emissions, are more stable than the cathode ray tubes, and allow the intensity and energy of the rays to be controlled separately.

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