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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

 

When the radiation has the right energy to excite the spin-flip transition, many photons will be absorbed. This is nuclear magnetic resonance.

 

The value of the field depends somewhat on the local molecular neighborhood; this allows information about the structure of the molecules to be determined.

 

Magnetic resonance imaging works the same way; the transition is excited in hydrogen atoms, which are the commonest in the human body.