X-Ray Production and Spectra

Overview

X-rays are high-frequency electromagnetic waves with very short wavelengths and high photon energies.

They are commonly produced when fast-moving electrons strike a metal target.

This topic is part of Quantum Physics because it combines:

  • electron acceleration
  • photon production
  • quantised atomic energy levels
  • spectral interpretation

Definition

X-rays are electromagnetic radiation produced in X-ray tubes mainly by rapid electron deceleration and by inner-shell electronic transitions in target atoms.

Why It Matters

This topic explains:

  • how electrical energy is converted into high-energy photons
  • why X-ray spectra have both continuous and discrete parts
  • how voltage, current, and target material affect the output

Key Representations

Properties of X-Rays

X-rays:

  • are electromagnetic waves
  • travel at speed in vacuum
  • have short wavelengths
  • have high frequencies
  • are ionising radiation
  • are highly penetrating

Applications include:

  • medical imaging
  • material testing
  • crystallography

X-Ray Tube Setup

A typical X-ray tube contains:

  • heated filament, the cathode
  • metal target, the anode
  • evacuated tube
  • high accelerating voltage
  • cooling system

Process:

  1. the filament emits electrons by thermionic emission
  2. electrons accelerate through potential difference
  3. electrons strike the metal target
  4. part of their energy becomes X-rays

Most energy becomes heat.

Electron Acceleration

Each electron gains kinetic energy:

where:

  • = elementary charge
  • = accelerating voltage

Higher voltage gives higher electron kinetic energy.

How X-Rays Are Produced

When electrons strike target atoms, they may:

  • decelerate rapidly near nuclei
  • eject inner-shell electrons
  • cause electron transitions inside target atoms

These processes generate two spectral components.

X-Ray Spectrum Components

A typical X-ray spectrum contains:

  1. continuous spectrum
  2. characteristic lines

Continuous X-Ray Spectrum

Also called Bremsstrahlung, braking radiation.

Produced when incident electrons are decelerated by target nuclei.

Why continuous:

Electrons may lose different amounts of energy in different collisions.

Therefore emitted photons can have a range of energies.

This gives a smooth background spectrum.

Characteristic X-Ray Lines

Sharp peaks superimposed on the continuous spectrum.

Produced when:

  1. an incident electron ejects an inner-shell electron
  2. a vacancy is created
  3. a higher-level electron falls to a lower level
  4. a photon is emitted with specific energy

Thus:

These energies depend on the target material.

Minimum Wavelength

Maximum possible photon energy occurs when one electron loses all its kinetic energy in a single interaction.

Then:

Hence:

Meaning of Minimum Wavelength

  • shortest wavelength in the continuous spectrum
  • highest photon energy possible
  • determined by tube voltage only

Effect of Tube Voltage

Increasing causes:

  1. higher electron kinetic energy
  2. smaller minimum wavelength
  3. greater overall intensity
  4. characteristic lines may appear if voltage is high enough to eject inner-shell electrons

Effect of Tube Current

Higher tube current means:

  • more electrons strike the target each second
  • greater X-ray intensity

But:

  • maximum photon energy is unchanged
  • is unchanged

if voltage is constant.

Effect of Target Material

Changing target metal changes:

  • characteristic-line positions
  • relative intensity pattern

Because different atoms have different internal energy levels.

However:

  • depends mainly on voltage, not target material

Spectral Interpretation

Continuous background:

  • from electron deceleration

Sharp peaks:

  • from atomic transitions in target atoms

Cut-off at short-wavelength end:

  • marks

Summary

X-rays are produced when fast electrons hit a metal target.

Two components:

  • continuous Bremsstrahlung spectrum
  • characteristic lines

Key equation:

Important ideas:

  • voltage controls maximum photon energy
  • current controls intensity
  • target material controls characteristic lines