Soft x-ray verification of bones for many global uses
Adrian A. Wanner @AdrianAWanner Fantastic talk by @Irene_RodrigFer from the cSAXS team @psich_en at #EMC2024 on her PhD work on using X-ray tensor tomography for studying the impact of physical exercise on bone healing around implants. PS: She’s on the job market! pic.x.com/enk5uk9tnw
I do not see a paper and have not much time. Can it extend to soft x-ray? I think of that as below 40 KeV down to visible. Particularly below 1500 eV. I was just looking at data on all the bones and range of motion in humans and animals. Active range of motion, where the imaging might go below the surface, but can do most with external sensors, tied to methods to check depth and shapes of skeleton and muscles below the surface.
Filed as (Soft x-ray verification of bones for many global uses)
Can use “hard x-rays selectively, enough to improve reliability”.
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation