Dublin, May 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Medical X-Ray Detectors Market - A Global and Regional Analysis: Focus on Product, Modality, Module Type, End User, Application, and Country Analysis - ...
X-rays can be an incredibly powerful medical tool, but as evidenced by the lead aprons we don when using them, they also come with potential health risks. To solve for this, researchers have now ...
Flexible detection: Prabodhi Nanayakkara and colleagues are developing robust, high-sensitivity curved X-ray detectors for medical applications. (Courtesy: University of Surrey) Digital flat-panel ...
A photo showcasing the OHMM material developed by researchers in one of the studies, used to paint a fabric with the FSU ...
New Delhi, Feb. 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The global X-ray detectors market was valued at US$ 3.82 in 2024 and is anticipated to reach US$ 6.43 billion by 2033, at a CAGR of 5.95% during the ...
Researchers in Australia have tapped into cutting-edge materials science to produce the world's thinnest X-ray detector, the component that translates energy from radiation into visual or electronic ...
X-ray and gamma ray detectors assess the spatial distribution, spectrum or other properties of x-ray and gamma ray emissions. The types of common detectors can be divided into three categories: ...
A step-change in the field of imaging applications could be on the horizon after Exciton Science researchers demonstrated a route to multi-energy X-ray detection with significantly enhanced ...
Jinsong Huang with his new detector crystal. (Courtesy: Craig Chandler/UNL University Communications) A new, highly sensitive X-ray detector that could be used for medical imaging has been built by ...
Researchers have created the world's thinnest X-ray detector using tin mono-sulfide (SnS) nanosheets. Highly sensitive and with a rapid response time, the new X-ray detector is less than 10 nanometers ...
A 3D image of a wrist with a watch showing part of the finger bones in white and soft tissue in red. (Image: MARS Bioimaging Ltd) Like Dorothy coming to Oz, doctors might finally be experiencing their ...