X Ray film emulsions are sensitive to light.
he discover xray
PG' stands for Parental Guidance. This means a film is suitable for general viewing, but some scenes may be unsuitable for younger children. A 'PG' film should not disturb a child aged around eight or older. Parents should consider whether the content might upset younger or more sensitive children.
not unless your bones are moved forward because of it
No, email addresses are not cap sensitive.
The duration of Film - film - is 1440.0 seconds.
It means that they are photo-sensitive, specifically silver halide as used in the emulsions photographic film.
i think it means a suspensionof a sensitive silver salt or a mixture of silver halides in a viscous medium (as a Gelatin solution) forming a coating on photographic plates, film, or paper
Cinema film is the footage made up of ". . . several different layers of emulsions and filters. On top of a safety base, an anti-hilation layer prevents fogging, followed by layers of red, green and blue emulsions each with a filter between them. The film stock also contains yellow, magenta and cyan dyes that are released during processing to give a full spectrum of color.
Hardly any at all. New advances in technology enable the film to be more sensitive to radiation. A chest xray has less radiation than walking to your car in the parking lot in summer.
If the patient's hands are in the field of the xray they will appear on the film, so even if they are on the stomach they will appear as if they are over or near the spine. If someone has helped immobilise the patient for the xray, then their hands may appear on the film.
Emulsions will settle into layers when they are left standing undisturbed.
Everything fades. However, old Xray films are the same as black-and-white photographic film. They last 100 years plus and counting. There is a big business in converting Xray films to computer files and then harvesting the film for the silver.
If by XRAY, you mean a plain film, which is to say a modality that uses Rontgen radiation, then, no. The adrenals need either CT, ultrasound or MRI to visualize the adrenals.
They aren't. They often look that way because of the way various photographic emulsions and CCD arrays are sensitive to certain wavelengths of light.
Emulsions can appear cloudy or white when light shines through it.
latent
yes