X-rays are like invisible messages that can show what’s inside something without touching it.
Imagine you have a toy box full of blocks and balls, but you can’t see what's inside. If you shine a really bright flashlight on the box from one side, some light might come out the other side, depending on what’s in there. X-rays work kind of like that bright flashlight, except it’s super powerful and can pass through things like your body or a box.
How x-rays see inside
When you get an x-ray at the doctor’s office, the x-rays go through your arm (or leg, or chest). Some of them come out the other side, just like light coming through a box. But parts of your body, like bones, stop more x-rays than soft tissues do. That’s why on the picture you see white lines showing where the bones are.
It's like having a special detective who can tell what’s inside something by seeing how much of the "flashlight" comes out the other side, and then drawing a map of what it found!
Examples
- A child gets an x-ray at the doctor’s office to see if they broke their arm.
- An x-ray machine is like a special camera that takes pictures of bones inside your body.
- X-rays are used in airports to check what's inside your luggage.
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See also
- What is Computed tomography (CT)?
- How Does Solar Flare Radiation Affect Earth?
- What Happens to Light When It Leaves the Sun?
- Ultrasound Explained - How does an ultrasound transducer work?
- How Does Physics: Ultrasound Transducers ( Linear array, Curvilinear, Phased array) Work?