The invention by Crookes at the end of the nineteenth century of a device called spinthariscope, which made use of the scintillating properties of Lead Sulfide allowed Rutherford to count a particles in an experiment, opening the way towards modern dosimetry. When at the same time Wilhelm C. Roentgen, also using a similar device, was able to record the first X-ray picture of his wife’s hand 2 weeks only after the X-ray discovery, he initiated the first and fastest technology transfer between particle physics and medical imaging and the beginning of a long and common history.
CITATION STYLE
Lecoq, P. (2020). Detectors in Medicine and Biology. In Particle Physics Reference Library: Volume 2: Detectors for Particles and Radiation (Vol. 2, pp. 913–964). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-35318-6_20
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