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CHAPTER XI.

137.Kind of Electrical Apparatus for Operating Discharge Tube for Powerful X-rays.Tesla and Shallenberger
138.How to Maintain the Phosphorescent Spot Cool.Tesla
139.Expulsion of Material Particles through the Walls of a Discharge Tube.Tesla
139a.Giving to X-rays the Property of Being Deflected by a Magnet.Lafay and Lodge
139b.Penetration of Molecules into the Glass of the Discharge Tube.Gouy
140.Vacuum Tubes Surrounded by a Violet Halo.Tesla and Hammer
141.Anæsthetic Properties of X-rays.Tesla and Edison
142. and 142a.Sciagraphs of Hair, Fur, etc., by X-rays. Pulsation of Heat detected.Tesla, Morton, and Norton
143.Propagation of X-rays through Air to Distances of 60 ft.Tesla
144.X-rays with Moderate Vacuum and High Potential.Tesla
145.Detailed Construction and Use of Single Electrode Discharge Tubes for Generating X-rays.Tesla
146.Percentage of Reflection.Tesla and Rood
146a.Reflected and Transmitted Rays Compared. Practical Application of Reflection in Sciagraphy. Analogy between Reflecting Power of Metals and their Position in the Electro-positive Series.Tesla
147.Discharge Tube Immersed in Oil. Rays Transmitted through Iron, Copper, and Brass, 1/4 in. Thick.Tesla
148.Bodies Not Made Conductors when Struck by X-rays.Tesla
149.Non-conductors Made Conductors by a Current.Appleyard
149a.Appleyard’s Experiment. Non-conductors Made Conductors by Current.
150.Electrical Resistance of Bodies Lowered by the Action of Electro-magnetic Waves.Minchin

CHAPTER XII.

151.Sciagraphic Plates Combined with Fluorescent Salts.Pupin, Swinton, and Henry.
152.Penetrating Power of X-rays Varies with the Vacuum.Thompson, S. P.
153.Reduction of Contact Potential of Metals by X-rays.Murray
154.Transparencies of Objects to X-rays Not Influenced by the Color. Detected by Simultaneous Photographic Impressions.Nodon, Lumière, Bleunard, and Labesse
155.Chlorine, Iodine, Sulphur, and Phosphorus Combined with Organic Materials Increase Opacity.Meslans, Bleunard, and Labesse
156.Application of X-rays to Distinguish Diamonds and Jet from Imitations.Buquet, Gascard, and Thompson, S. P.
157.Inactive Discharge Tubes Made Luminous by X-rays.Dufour
158.Non-refraction in a Vacuum.Beaulard
159.Bas-relief Sciagraphs by X-rays.Carpentier and Miller
160.Transparency of Eye Determined by Sciagraph of Bullet Therein.Wuillomenet
161.Mineral Substances Detected in Vegetable and Animal Products.Ranwez
162.Hertz Waves and Roentgen Rays Not Identical.Errera
163.Non-mechanical Action by X-rays Determined by the Radiometer.Gossart
164.X-rays within Discharge Tube.Battelli
165.Combined Camera and Sciascope.Bleyer
166.Non-polarization of X-rays.Thompson, S. P., Macintyre
167.Diffuse Reflection. Dust Figures Indirectly by X-rays.Thompson, S. P.
168.Continuation of Experiments in § 113.Lodge
169.Thermopile Inert to X-rays.Porter
170.Non-diffraction of X-rays.Magie
171.Resistance of Selenium Reduced by X-rays.Giltay and Haga

Total number of sections to this place, 199.

CHAPTER XIII.

200.Needle Located by X-rays and then Removed.Hogarth
201.Needle Located at Scalpel by X-rays and then Removed.Savary
202.Diagnosis with Fluorescent Screen.Renton and Somerville
203.Bullet Located by Five Sciagraphs.Miller
204.Bones in Apposition Discovered by X-rays and afterward Remedied by Operation. Other Cases.Miller
204a.Necrosis.Miller
205.Application of X-rays in Dentistry.Morton
206.Elements of the Thorax.Morton
207.A Colles’ Fracture Detected by X-rays.Morton
208.Motions of Liver, Outlines of Spleen, and Tuberculosis Indicated.Morton and Williams
209.Osteomyelitis distinguished from Periostitis.Lannelongue, Barthelemy, and Oudin.
210.Concluding Miscellaneous Experiments Relating to Similar Applications of X-rays.Ashhurst, Packard, Müller, Keen, and Morton, T. G.

CHAPTER XIV.

Theoretical Considerations, Arguments, and Kindred Radiations.Anthony
Roentgen Rays and Phenomena of the Anode and Cathode

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