A photographic image produced on a radiosensitive surface by radiation other than visible light (especially by X-rays or gamma rays)
1 But a skiagraph , or X-ray photograph, has a fascination all its own.
2 You can see them all quite plainly in the skiagraph .
3 If you will study my skiagraph , you will see how I got my first clue.
4 To take, therefore, a skiagraph of a brain through two thicknesses of skull, with our present methods, is an impossibility.
5 The Greek word for shadow is "skia," and the proper rendering, therefore, of shadowgraph is " skiagraph , " corresponding to photograph.
6 Even bed-ridden patients can be skiagraphed through the bed-clothes, and, therefore, without danger from exposure.
7 The bones, however, as is seen in nearly all of the skiagraphs illustrating this paper, cast well-defined shadows.
8 Figure 7 shows two buck-shot skiagraphed inside of a baby's skull, and therefore through two thicknesses of bone.
9 ( Skiagraphed by Mr. Sydney Rowland, and published in the "British Medical Journal.")
10 Hastily we drove back to the laboratory and Kennedy set to work again developing the second set of skiagraphs .
11 In the laboratory, as soon as he could develop the skiagraphs he had taken, Kennedy began a minute study of them.
12 [Illustration: A Skiagraph (X-RAY photograph) of the hand.
13 Mr. Sydney Rowland skiagraphed the hand, and showed that there was only a bridge of bone uniting the last two joints of the finger.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for skiagraph