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  1. Diagnostic X-rays, discovered in 1895 by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, revolutionised medical diagnostics, allowing non-invasive body imaging.

  2. Sep 17, 2015 · In today’s world, doctors order X-rays to diagnose all sorts of problems: a broken bone, pneumonia, heart failure, and much, much more. Mammography, the standard screening method for breast cancer, uses X-rays.

  3. May 16, 2017 · It is difficult to imagine how powerful it must have been, in 1896, to witness an X-ray operator remotely anatomize the living body. Seeing inside the body had been a dream of physicians for centuries prior, and there is every reason to believe that its achievement has not eroded much of its social power.

  4. By 1900, only 5 years after its invention, the use of the X-ray machine was widely described as being essential for clinical care, especially for making a diagnosis of foreign bodies and fractures (8).

  5. January 1896 – First use of X-rays. X-ray images are initially a novelty. However, by the end of the year, doctors around the world, including those in New Zealand, are using them.

  6. 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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  8. Nov 3, 2015 · X-rays themselves are a form of electromagnetic radiation, composed of the same photons as visible light, microwaves, and radio waves, only vibrating at much shorter wavelengths and much higher...

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