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- From: simon@ewd.dsto.gov.au (Simon Rockliff)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: Airport X-Rays
- Message-ID: <1992Jul30.115125.164278@dstos3.dsto.gov.au>
- Date: 30 Jul 92 17:51:23 GMT
- References: <1992Jul13.020123.3132@mccc.edu> <13ra2gINN10i@grapevine.EBay.Sun.COM>
- <1992Jul23.115038.5296@werple.pub.uu.oz.au> <BrwMMA.6rG@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: simon@ewd (Simon Rockliff)
- Organization: Defence Science and Technology Organisation, Salisbury, South Australia
- Lines: 28
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-
- In article <BrwMMA.6rG@news.cso.uiuc.edu>, dvsg0223@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (David Salamon) writes:
- |> smckinty@sunicnc.France.Sun.COM (Steve McKinty - Sun ICNC) writes:
- |>
- |> >The X-rays themselves won't do any damage, unless you're carrying something
- |> >like 1000ASA photographic film, but they use pretty hefty electromagnets
- |> >to focus the beam, so I never trust floppies or tapes in them, just in case.
- |>
- |> Just a physics point here, but electromagnets will not focus ANY
- |> electromagnetic wave, including X-rays. Remember superposition of fields?
- |> People have been trying to focus X-rays for many years without much success.
- |> Virtually all X-ray machines just use incoherent, unfocussed X-rays.
- |>
- |> If there are magnets in those X-ray machines, they are most likely in the
- |> motors running the conveyer belt.
- |>
- |> David
- |>
- |> --------------------------------------------------------------
- |> David Salamon Physics Graduate Student (Slave
-
- Perhaps what Steve McKinty meant by beam was a high energy electron beam which is
- used to bombard a target to produce the X-rays. Searching in the depths of my
- memory I recall that my 1978 vintage Physics textbook had a picture of an
- electron beam, accelerated by a high electric potential, and focussed by an array
- of electromagnets onto a tungsten target, producing X-rays. However, I have no
- idea if the modern X-ray machines use different methods to produce the X-rays.
-
- Simon Rockliff
-