If I press a flashlight against my fingers, I see them glowing in a eerie red light. I see dark lines, which are veins - but I see no bones. Please try this in a dark room to see what I mean.
Why do my phalangi (sp?) not show up? is the light somehow routed around the bones?
Yes, the light is dispersed as it travels through the flesh, like this:
LIGHT SOURCE
||
||
-------------Skin
/\
/ \
/ \
/\XXXX/\ <imagine that XX is the bone there
/ \ / \
/ \/ \
--------------Skin
Imagine the lines as rays of light being disperesed all the time;
There’s probably an element of internal reflection on the inner surface of the skin etc. too.
On a related note, a few years ago I noticed a lump in… ahem, a rather delicate area. After procrastinating for a few days I went to see the doc (better embarrassed than dead, right?) and explained my fears.
Anyway, he prodded about for a bit, and said it was most likely to be a small cyst rather than a tumour, and there was an easy way of finding out. He pulled out a torch (as we ignorant Brits call flashlights) and shone it through the offending part. Hey presto, it shone right through the lump. He explained that this was because the cyst was full of fluid, rather than being solid like a tumour. He also said it would disappear on its own, which it did.
He still sent me for an ultrasound scan just to make sure. Now that was interesting - you know how pregnant women get to see their unborn baby on the TV screen? Well I had a similar experience, allowing me to get a whole new perspective on my anatomy…
You would have thought that I’m beyond the age of putting things in my mouth, but that’s what I did with a small light bulb (low voltage & well insulated of course). Go to a dark room, wait for your eyes to adjust, and light your skull from the inside. See your whole face and your nostrils glow. Creeeepy.
I think I’ve heard of a kind of mammography or something like that using red or near infrared light.
Computer rendered images of human skin, porcelain or such always look kinda dull, because they don’t consider the internal light dispersion, until you add new special algorithms just to imitate that.