measuring flux at various energy ranges like the graph I posted, I believe that is self explanatory, isn't it?
Yes it is, in the sense that it is an exponential scale dealing in microscopic fractions of a watt of energy. But there's a fairly large gaffe you've committed that it's now appropriate to address.
I asked about x-ray
photon energy, and you posted a graph of
deposited energy over time, such as the raw reading from a detector. The detector cannot differentiate between the various photon energies that strike it, but it can measure the overall energy deposited.
But see, those are two different uses of the word "energy." Deposited energy is measured in watts, such as the solar influx for the purposes of computing solar heating.
Photon energy is measured in electron volts. I asked you about photon energy for naturally occurring x-rays. Let's say solar x-rays. And instead you went away for 15 minutes and Googled up a graph of deposited energy. You don't seem to understand the difference.
Photon energy determines, among other things, the penetrating power of each x-ray photon. Groves used 8 MeV x-rays. What is the photon energy of solar x-rays?