radiograph - translation to English
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radiograph - translation to English

IMAGING TECHNIQUE USING IONIZING AND NON-IONIZING RADIATION
Radiograph; Radiographs; Radiographic; Skiagraph; X-Ray Photography; X-ray photography; Medical radiography; Radiographic equipment; Pneumogram; Skiagram; Radiogram (medicine); X-ray radiography; Plain film X-ray; X-ray imaging; X-Ray imaging; X-radiographs; X-ray images; X-ray image; X-Ray image; Contrast radiography; Plain X-rays; Plain X rays; Radiologic shielding; Shielding (radiography); Dual energy; Dual-energy; Dual-energy CT; History of radiography; Radiographical; 🩻; Sciagraph
  • AP radiograph of the [[lumbar spine]]
  • basilar]] and [[posterior cerebral]] circulation
  • A plain radiograph of the [[elbow]]
  • Taking an X-ray image with early [[Crookes tube]] apparatus, late 1800s
  • 3D rendered]] image at upper left
  • Ida]].
  • The first radiograph
  • A hand prepared to be X-rayed
  • 1897 sciagraph (X-ray photograph) of ''[[Pelophylax lessonae]]'' (then ''Rana Esculenta''), from James Green & James H. Gardiner's "Sciagraphs of British Batrachians and Reptiles"
  • detector]]
  • A medical radiograph of a skull

radiograph         
(n.) = radiografía

Def: Fotografía que se consigue al proyectar radiación a través de un cuerpo opaco.
Ex: A radiograph is a photograph produced by the passage of radiation, such as X rays, gamma rays, or neutrons, through an opaque object.
radiograph         
radiógrafo
radiographic         
(adj.) = radiográfico
Ex: Thirty-four months after surgery, the cat remains well and has no radiographic evidence of pulmonary metastasis.

Definition

Radiograph
·add. ·vt To make a radiograph of.
II. Radiograph ·add. ·noun An instrument for measuring and recording solar radiation.
III. Radiograph ·noun A picture produced by the Rontgen rays upon a sensitive surface, photographic or fluorescent, especially a picture of opaque objects traversed by the rays.
IV. Radiograph ·add. ·noun An image or picture produced upon a sensitive surface, as of a photographic plate, by some form of radiation other than light, as the Rontgen rays, radium rays, ·etc.; ·esp., a picture of opaque objects traversed by the rays; a skiagraph.

Wikipedia

Radiography

Radiography is an imaging technique using X-rays, gamma rays, or similar ionizing radiation and non-ionizing radiation to view the internal form of an object. Applications of radiography include medical radiography ("diagnostic" and "therapeutic") and industrial radiography. Similar techniques are used in airport security (where "body scanners" generally use backscatter X-ray). To create an image in conventional radiography, a beam of X-rays is produced by an X-ray generator and is projected toward the object. A certain amount of the X-rays or other radiation is absorbed by the object, dependent on the object's density and structural composition. The X-rays that pass through the object are captured behind the object by a detector (either photographic film or a digital detector). The generation of flat two dimensional images by this technique is called projectional radiography. In computed tomography (CT scanning) an X-ray source and its associated detectors rotate around the subject which itself moves through the conical X-ray beam produced. Any given point within the subject is crossed from many directions by many different beams at different times. Information regarding attenuation of these beams is collated and subjected to computation to generate two dimensional images in three planes (axial, coronal, and sagittal) which can be further processed to produce a three dimensional image.

Examples of use of radiograph
1. Sir Henry Wyatt has the dour gloom of Gordon Brown (the X–radiograph helpfully says "he originally faced in the opposite direction"). William Roper is suddenly the image of David Blunkett.