← Back to context Comment by YetAnotherNick 3 days ago Any source to this? I am hearing this for the first time. 4 comments YetAnotherNick Reply s0rce 3 days ago ITs easy to make X-rays, you just hit a metal target with electrons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_tube YetAnotherNick 2 days ago You can hit metal the same way for EUV. on_the_train 2 days ago No you can't, or rather you only get a tiny amount in the correct wavelengths s0rce 2 days ago I assume this doesn't work well otherwise everyone would be doing it.
s0rce 3 days ago ITs easy to make X-rays, you just hit a metal target with electrons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_tube YetAnotherNick 2 days ago You can hit metal the same way for EUV. on_the_train 2 days ago No you can't, or rather you only get a tiny amount in the correct wavelengths s0rce 2 days ago I assume this doesn't work well otherwise everyone would be doing it.
YetAnotherNick 2 days ago You can hit metal the same way for EUV. on_the_train 2 days ago No you can't, or rather you only get a tiny amount in the correct wavelengths s0rce 2 days ago I assume this doesn't work well otherwise everyone would be doing it.
on_the_train 2 days ago No you can't, or rather you only get a tiny amount in the correct wavelengths
ITs easy to make X-rays, you just hit a metal target with electrons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_tube
You can hit metal the same way for EUV.
No you can't, or rather you only get a tiny amount in the correct wavelengths
I assume this doesn't work well otherwise everyone would be doing it.