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Science Wood Print featuring the photograph Roentgens X-ray Machine, 19th Century by Science Source

The watermark in the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final print.

Frame

Top Mat

Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions

Image:

7.00" x 8.00"

Overall:

7.00" x 8.00"

 

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Roentgens X-ray Machine, 19th Century Wood Print

Science Source

by Science Source

Small Image

$81.00

Product Details

Roentgens X-ray Machine, 19th Century wood print by Science Source.   Bring your artwork to life with the texture and added depth of a wood print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 3/4" thick maple wood. There are D-clips on the back of the print for mounting it to your wall using mounting hooks and nails (included).

Design Details

Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen (1845-1923), German experimental physicist and discoverer of X-rays. While using a discharge tube (in which an electric... more

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3 - 4 business days

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Wood Print Tags

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Photograph Tags

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Artist's Description

Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen (1845-1923), German experimental physicist and discoverer of X-rays. While using a discharge tube (in which an electric discharge is passed through a gas at low pressure) in a darkened room, Roentgen noticed that a card coated with barium platinocyanide glowed when the tube was switched on. The effect was not blocked by an intervening wall, or even a thin sheet of metal. Roentgen termed this newly discovered phenomenon X-ray radiation, and suggested that it consisted of electromagnetic rays with a shorter wavelength than light. He was awarded the first Nobel Prize for Physics in 1901. Drawing of the X-ray machine used by German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen to produce images of the hand. The generator (B) supplied a high voltage to the cathode ray tube (Crookes tube) at upper right (T). This tube produced X-rays which left an image of the hand on a covered, photographic plate (C).

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