Quantum Imaging Lab
This episode introduces electricity as the foundation of x-ray production, opening with the atomic nature of electric charge and the distinction between electrostatics and electrodynamics. The three methods of electrification — friction, contact, and induction — are explained with everyday examples, followed by the four laws of electrostatics: attraction and repulsion, Coulomb's Law (strength of electrostatic force), charge distribution, and charge concentration. The episode then moves into material properties, distinguishing conductors, insulators, semiconductors, and superconductors, with clinical and historical context including William Shockley's 1946 demonstration of semiconductor behavior. The second half covers the core principles of electric circuits, defining current, voltage, and resistance with their SI units, symbols, and measuring instruments. Ohm's Law (V = I × R) is presented with worked clinical examples, followed by a comparison of series and parallel circuits and their effects on current, resistance, and power. Direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC) are contrasted — including their waveform representations and the contributions of Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla — and the episode closes with electric power (P = I × V), its formula variations, and applied x-ray imaging calculations. This episode aligns with the Safety content category — Radiation Physics and Radiobiology subcategory — of the ARRT Radiography Examination Content Specifications. Audio content is adapted from original instructional material developed by Professor Sanjay Arya, M.S., R.T.(R)(MR) for radiologic technology education. Part of the Radiologic Physics series — Quantum Imaging Lab. © 2026 Quantum Imaging Lab. All rights reserved.
22 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Quantum Imaging Lab-fællesskabet!