well, I'm not really recomending it, but your dog could eat something and have it x rayed.
its the 5th one
through x-ray
The x-ray exam is radiography. Meaning to take a -graph or "picture" using roentgen rays.
The patient has to be in betwee the X-ray source and the film, so that a ''picture'' of the shadows made by the X-ray can be taken.
x-ray
It is highly recommended that you are barefoot. That way the x-ray picture is as clear as possible so that the doctor can easily determine what is wrong.
I dont specifically know what chemical it is, but x-ray film developing solution is used to develop an x-ray. Just like with photographs, an x-ray is a picture taken on a big piece of film (it is loaded into the board you stand in front of to get an x-ray), and then the 'picture' is snapped, and the film has to be developed in a dark room, where you dip the x-ray in a developing solution for a few minutes and then you can see the picture (in this case your bones). before an x-ray is developed its just a big black piece of film, and just like with a camera, if you expose it to light before it has been developed, it is ruined. hope this answered your question
It's an X-Ray
There are two important parts of an X-ray machine, the x-ray source and the x-ray detector.In your body, your bones are x-ray opaque-x-ray cannot pass through it and so, x-ray is detected on the x-ray detector but not your bones. And when x-ray is flashed on your body you can see the silhouette of your bones, assuming that there is an x-ray detector opposite the x-ray source..Why is the silhouette on the film not black?The photograph of the x-ray was subjected to negativity (photography) and so the lighter areas in the original picture become darker and the darker areas (silhouette of your bones) in the original picture become lighter.How can this x-ray opaque concept be used?Cerebral angiography is used to see if your brain is bleeding, if it has blood clots and many more. In this contrast x-ray procedure, a radio opaque dye that absorbs more or less x-ray photons than the surrounding tissue is injected into a cerebral artery so that the practitioner could see the cerebral circulatory system.
Peter Turvey has written: 'Occupations 2003' 'Everyday Things & How They Work (X-Ray Picture Books)' 'X Ray Picture Book of Everyday Things (X-ray Paperbacks)' 'The X-ray picture book of everyday things and how they work' 'Occupations 2002'
oddesy x ray dogs
not with the current technology :(