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Johnny El-Rady / 13 items

N 7 B 3.6K C 0 E Mar 7, 2024 F Mar 7, 2024
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The first X-ray image, “Hand mit Ringen” by Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, December 22, 1895. Wellcome Library, London/CC BY 4.0
wellcomecollection.org/works/wjc8ejn2/items

Röntgen’s (1845-1923) subject was his wife Anna Bertha's left hand. On seeing the picture, she is reported to have said "Ich habe meinen Tod gesehen" ("I have seen my death"). And she never set foot in his lab again 😊.

“It has sometimes been suggested that the discovery of X-rays was a happy accident ; but there is no doubt, from the nature of his preparations, that Rontgen had, as he himself stated, set out to see whether the electric discharge through a gas at low pressure gave out any kind of 'invisible radiation' capable of detection outside the walls of the glass tube in which the discharge was taking place. The discharge tube (an ordinary Crookes tube of the cylindrical pattern, with a fiat cathode at one end, and an anode tucked away in a side tube) had been wrapped in black paper, to cut off all the visible glow from the discharge, and a primitive fluorescent screen, consisting of a few crystals of barium platinocyanide on a piece of cardboard, lay handy on an adjacent bench-barium platinocyanide being a substance commonly used at the time to detect the invisible rays in the solar spectrum. On exciting the tube by means of a small induction coil to see if the light from the discharge was properly obscured by its black paper wrapper, Rontgen found that this was, indeed, the case ; but he also noticed that his primitive fluorescent screen was now glowing brightly. The discovery of X-radiation had been made.”

Source:
Röntgen Centenary and Fifty Years of X-Rays
•J. A. CROWTHER
Nature volume 155, pages 351–353 (1945)

Via accidental discovery or not, Röngen concluded, correctly, that he was dealing with a new kind of ray. He dubbed these rays X-rays because of their unknown nature. The name stuck.

Röntgen published a paper about his discovery: "On a New Kind of Rays", which can be found here:
web.lemoyne.edu/~giunta/roentgen.html

Röntgen received the first Nobel Prize for Physics, in 1901. Prize motivation: “in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the remarkable rays subsequently named after him”. However, Röntgen gave away the prize money to his university, the University of Würzburg in Bavaria, Germany. Moreover, he never took out any patents on X-rays, to ensure that the world could freely benefit from his work. Unfortunately, his altruism came at considerable personal cost: at the time of his death in 1923, Röntgen was nearly bankrupt from the inflation following World War I.

Further reading:
caferoentgen.com/2023/10/07/a-tale-of-two-hands-the-story...

Tags:   vintage history science STEM X rays radiotherapy Black and white black and white photographs black and white photos old photos old photographs Roentgen rays

N 9 B 1.7K C 0 E Mar 7, 2024 F Mar 7, 2024
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A chest X-ray in progress at Professor Menard's radiology department at the Cochin hospital, Paris, 1914. Jacques Boyer/Roger Viollet—Getty Images

Via:
time.com/4155549/vintage-x-ray-photos/

Tags:   vintage history science STEM X rays radiotherapy Black and white black and white photographs black and white photos old photos old photographs Roentgen rays

N 0 B 1.2K C 0 E Mar 7, 2024 F Mar 7, 2024
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wellcomecollection.org/works/vv8up5rr

Radiograph: foot of Leonard Schuster, aged six and a half.
•Arthur Schuster (1851–1934), 1896
Description
Foot of Leonard Schuster, aged six and a half, made at Owen's college, Manchester.
Contributors
•Arthur Schuster

Because the X-ray is rather blurry, one suspects that Leonard struggled to keep still!

Tags:   vintage history science STEM X rays radiotherapy Black and white black and white photographs black and white photos old photos old photographs Roentgen rays

N 7 B 1.7K C 0 E Mar 7, 2024 F Mar 7, 2024
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www.exhibitoronline.com/topics/article.asp?ID=1616

“In the late 19th century, X-rays set America's imagination ablaze. Only three years after its discovery by William Roentgen, the mysterious radiation went on display in this free-standing pavilion at the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition of 1898 in Omaha, NE. Here, X-ray machines let attendees glimpse the interiors of everyday objects as well as their own bodies, blissfully unaware the devices were zapping them with 1,500 times as much radiation as contemporary X-ray machines. Even when their hair fell out, they embraced the rays as an early – and effective – depilatory.”

Tags:   vintage history science STEM X rays radiotherapy Black and white black and white photographs black and white photos old photos old photographs Roentgen rays

N 3 B 1.4K C 0 E Mar 7, 2024 F Mar 7, 2024
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A frog with a broken leg that has healed (as indicated by the thicker middle part of the hind leg at the top)
Shown at Manchester on 3rd March 1896.
Note the
Contributors
•Arthur Schuster

wellcomecollection.org/works/pcfk4hmk

Tags:   vintage history science STEM X rays radiotherapy Black and white black and white photographs black and white photos old photos old photographs Roentgen rays


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