Zusammenfassung der Ressource
AQA Physics 3 - Medical Applications
of Physics
- Medical Applications of Physics
- X-Rays
- High frequency & Short wavelength.
- Properties: - affect
photographic paper the
same way as light -
absorbed by metal/bone -
transmitted by soft,
healthy tissue
- Often used in hospitals to check for fractures and dental problems.
- Some soft-tissue body organs can be filled with a
contrast medium that absorbs x-rays.
- X-rays cause ionisation and damage living tissue when it passes through.
- Workers wear film badges so they know if they
roughly how much they have been exposed to, or
they can wear lead aprons.
- Even though x-rays can cause cancer, they
can also treat cancerous tumours at or
near the surface of the body.
- CT Scanners use X-Rays, they produce
3D images on a computer but are also
much more expensive to make and run.
- Ultrasound
- Human ear can detect between 50Hz and 20,000Hz
- Anything above 20,000Hz is called Ultrasound
- Can be used for diagnosis and treatment eg. Baby scanning
- Non-ionising, so it's safer than x-rays
- Ultrasound waves can be produced
electronically for things such as fishing
boats
- Part of the wave is reflected at a
boundary between two different
materials.
- Wave then travels back
to a detector.
- The time it takes to reach
the detector can be used to
calculate how far away the
boundary is.
- Using the equation: S = v x t.
Where v is the speed of the
ultrasound wave in s.
- Note that is may be double the
correct distance as the wave
will have travelled from the
computer and back again.
- Refractive Index
- The measure of how much a substance can refract a light ray.
- n= sin i / sin r
- n - refractive index
- sin i - sine angle of incidence
sinr - sine angle of refraction
- Refraction takes place due to the change in
speed of the wave as it crosses a boundary.
- A light ray travelling along the normal is not refracted
- The Endoscope /
Total Internal
Reflection
- When a light ray crosses from glass to air, it refracts away from
the normal and a partially refracted ray is seen.
- If the angle of incidence is increased, the angle of
refraction increases until the light ray refracts along the
boundary.
- The angle of incidence at which this happens is the critical angle.
- If the angle of incidence is
increased above the critical
angle, the light ray undergoes
total internal reflection.
- When this occurs the angle of reflection
is equal to the angle of incidence.
- n = 1 /sin c
- n = refractive index
- sinc = sine critical angle
- Endoscope contains many fibre optics (thin,
flexible, glass wires). Used to see inside the body.
- Visible light rays can be sent along these by total internal reflection.
- ONLY HAPPENS WHEN RAY IS
TRAVELLING FROM MORE
DENSE TO LESS DENSE
MATERIAL
- Lenses
- Converging Lens
- Refracts two parallel rays to a point (the principal focus)
- Distance from principal focus to centre of the lens is the focal length.
- There is a principal
focus on both sides
of the lens.
- If the object is further
from the lens than the
principal focus it forms an
- inverted - real image
- If the object is closer than the principal
focus it forms an - upright - virtual
image behind the object.
- This image is magnified.
- Magnification = image height / object height
- Diverging Lens
- Refracts two parallel rays away from a point (the principal focus)
- Centre of the lens to principal focus is the focal length.
- Image produces is ALWAYS virtual.
- Principal focus on both sides of the lens.
- Using Lenses
- Use ray diagrams to find the image that different lenses
produce with different objects and positions.
- Line 1 - Parallel to axis, refracted through F
- Line 2 - Passes straight through the centre of the lens
- Line 3 - Passes through F, refracted parallel to the axis.
- The Eye
- Light enters the eye through the cornea.
- The cornea and the eye lens focus the light onto the retina.
- Iris adjusts the size of the pupil to control the amount of light entering.
- Ciliary muscles adjust the thickness of the lens to control focusing.
- Attached to the lens by suspensory ligaments.
- Normal human eye has a near point
of 25cm and a far point of infinity.
This is the range of vision.
- Lens Power
- P = 1/f
- Power = dioptres (D)
- Focal
Length (m)
- Short Sightedness
- See close objects clearly but distance is blurred.
- Use diverging lens to correct sight.
- Because image
is formed in
front of the
retina.
- Long Sightedness
- See distance objects but close up is blurred.
- Use converging lens to correct sight.
- Because image is
formed behind the
retina.
- The higher the refractive index used as glasses, the flatter
and thinner the lens can be.