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That they have neither a negative or positive charge
That means the Roentgen rays are electrically neutral.
No, magnetic fields do not affect X-rays. X-rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation, while magnetic fields affect charged particles. Therefore, magnetic fields do not interact with X-rays in the same way they do with charged particles.
Neutrinos are not deflected by electric or magnetic fields because they have no electric charge and very weak interactions with matter. These properties allow neutrinos to travel through space without being affected by electromagnetic forces.
Yes, X-rays can be affected by magnetic fields. When passed through a magnetic field, the path of the X-rays can be altered, leading to changes in the resulting image or data obtained. This effect is known as the Faraday effect.
Yes, an electric field can deflect X-rays, as X-rays are electromagnetic radiation. By applying an electric field to charged particles in an X-ray beam, their path can be altered or deflected. This principle can be utilized in techniques such as X-ray crystallography.
Light, sound, X-rays, radio waves, Earth's magnetic field, sun's tanning rays
Ionizing radiation is generally divided into electromagnetic radiation and particulate radiation. Charged particles are affected, and this will include protons, beta particles and alpha particles. Neutrons, another particulate form of ionizing radiation, won't be affected. Electromagnetic ionizing radiation, cosmic rays and gamma rays, are not effected.
Charged particles will be deflected by an electric field. The movement of any charged particle through an electric field will cause that charged particle to be attracted by one pole of the field and repelled by the other. That leaves uncharged particulate radiation, like a neutron, and electromagnetic radiation that will not be deflected by an electric field. The electromagnetic radiation will include X-rays and gamma rays.
They produce forces: F=evB = e(-v.B + vxB) = e(-vBcos(angle) + vBsin(angle)).The forces are quaternion conssiting of scalar force -ev.B and vector force evxB.These forces create a orbit of motion in the magnetic field. If the angle is 90 degrees the force is a circle perpendicular to the magnetic field.
No. Magnetic fields may interfere with electromagnetic waves (x-rays, gamma rays, UV, visible light etc.) but not sound (acoustic?) waves. The two are completely different types of waves.
An MRI scanner emits radio waves whilst it is scanning and utilises a strong magnetic field. It does not emit any ionising radiation like X-rays.