Manuscripts
Photographs of X-rays
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Photographs of X-rays
Manuscripts
X-rays of frog's legs. Also includes photographs of Dayton Miller, Major Battersby and his orderly taking a radiograph, and Keleket's "Grosse Flamme," 1906.
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Photographs of X-rays
Manuscripts
X-rays of a hand. Also includes a mounted photo of R. W. Wood, photo of an X-ray illusion upon the state - conversion of a living man into a skeleton.
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Photographs, negatives, X-rays, and X-ray tube
Manuscripts
Includes X-ray and photographs of X-rays of various objects, animals, and human hands, photographs, some of Röentgen, his family, house, and laboratory, various photographic negatives, and Röentgen's X-ray tube. Box 3 contains a copy of Michael I. Pupin's X-ray photo of a hand of a gunshot victim, Columbia University, 1896.
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Photographic prints of X-rays
Manuscripts
The collection consists of articles, correspondence, chiefly written by or to Otto Glasser, photographs, pamphlets, X-rays, and, an X-ray tube used by Röentgen. There are several copies of the X-ray Röentgen took of his wife, Anna Bertha's hand on December 22, 1895, and an X-ray of the hand of a gunshot victim, taken by Michael I. Pupin in February 1896. Correspondents include Thomas Edison, Bern Dibner, Wilhelm Conrad Röentgen, Arthur R. Von Hippel, and numerous other scientists and physicists. There are several articles written by, as well as X-rays done by, Wolfram Conrad Fuchs, a German electrical engineer who became a pioneer in radiography.
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Photographic prints of X-rays
Manuscripts
The collection consists of articles, correspondence, chiefly written by or to Otto Glasser, photographs, pamphlets, X-rays, and, an X-ray tube used by Röentgen. There are several copies of the X-ray Röentgen took of his wife, Anna Bertha's hand on December 22, 1895, and an X-ray of the hand of a gunshot victim, taken by Michael I. Pupin in February 1896. Correspondents include Thomas Edison, Bern Dibner, Wilhelm Conrad Röentgen, Arthur R. Von Hippel, and numerous other scientists and physicists. There are several articles written by, as well as X-rays done by, Wolfram Conrad Fuchs, a German electrical engineer who became a pioneer in radiography.
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Friedrich X-ray diffraction photograph
Manuscripts
The collection consists of articles, correspondence, chiefly written by or to Otto Glasser, photographs, pamphlets, X-rays, and, an X-ray tube used by Röentgen. There are several copies of the X-ray Röentgen took of his wife, Anna Bertha's hand on December 22, 1895, and an X-ray of the hand of a gunshot victim, taken by Michael I. Pupin in February 1896. Correspondents include Thomas Edison, Bern Dibner, Wilhelm Conrad Röentgen, Arthur R. Von Hippel, and numerous other scientists and physicists. There are several articles written by, as well as X-rays done by, Wolfram Conrad Fuchs, a German electrical engineer who became a pioneer in radiography.
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