Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GCSE AQA Physics 3
Medical Applications
- X-rays in medicine
- How do X-rays work?
- High frequency, short
wavelength EM waves
- Transmitted by healthy tissue,
absorbed by bones & metal
- Affect photographic film in same way as light
- Images can be formed electronically
using charge-coupled devices (CCDs)
- Silicon chips that produce electronic
signals - form high resolution images
- CT scans use X-rays
- Computerised axial tomography
(CT) scans produce high resolution
images of soft & hard tissue
- Beam fired through body from
X-ray tube - picked up by
detectors (rotated during scan)
- Forms image of 2D slice
through body - put multiple
scans together --> 3D image
- Treating cancer
- Cause ionisation -
kill cancer cells
- Radiographers wear lead
aprons, stand behind lead
screen or leave the room
- Ultrasound
- Higher frequency than upper limit
of human hearing - 20000 Hz
- Wave passes from one medium to another
- Some reflected off boundary - partial reflection
- Time it takes to reach detector - measure how far away boundary is
- Oscilloscope traces: distance = speed x time
- Then divide by 2
- Uses
- Breaking down kidney stones - turn
hard masses into small particles
- Pre-natal scanning of a fetus
- waves reflected off fetus
- Medical imaging
- Safe?
- Ultrasound: non-ionising - safe
- X-rays: ionising - can cause
cancer, not for babies
- CT Scans: more ionising - should
only use if really needed
- Image quality?
- Ultrasound: fuzzy
- X-rays: clear images of bones & metal
- CT Scans: detailed, high resolution images - 3D