Radiation Sentence Examples

radiation
  • They got a dose of radiation poisoning.

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  • We've gotta treat as many people as we can who are suffering from radiation poisoning.

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  • The radiation treatments we found in the feds' storage facility worked.

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  • At sunrise, the shortwave radiation from the Sun begins to heat the ground.

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  • The object of all heating apparatus is the transference of heat from the fire to the various parts of the building it is intended to warm, and this transfer may be effected by radiation, by conduction or by convection.

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  • Even so, you want to be wary of the spread of radiation in the aquifers.

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  • The crucible was surrounded with a bad conductor of heat to minimize loss by radiation.

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  • In the course of time the centres of radiation of all these groups had imposed upon them ornate rose dei venti, or windroses, such as may still be seen upon our compass-cards.

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  • Ultraviolet radiation can damage both your eyes and skin; in fact, prolonged exposure to bright sunlight can cause extensive damage to the corneas and conjunctivas of the eyes.

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  • She'd traveled nonstop, sticking to narrow country roads and the forest to avoid both people and zones marked as having any sort of radiation fallout from the nuke strikes.

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  • The most fundamental experimental confirmation that the theory of the aether has received on the optical side in recent years has been the verification of Maxwell's proposition that radiation exerts mechanical force on a material system, on which it falls, which may be represented in all cases as the resultant of pressures operating along the rays, and of intensity equal at each point of free space to the density of radiant energy.

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  • Of other papers in which he dealt with this and kindred branches of physics may be mentioned "Observations with a Rigid Spectroscope," "Heating of a Disc by Rapid Motion in Vacuo," "Thermal Equilibrium in an Enclosure Containing Matter in Visible Motion," and "Internal Radiation in Uniaxal Crystals."

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  • When we are trying to bring radiation into connexion with temperature, we must therefore take a sufficiently large group of molecules and compare their average energies with the average radiation.

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  • The surface of the calorimeter and the enclosure should be permanently blackened so as to increase the loss of heat by radiation as much as possible, as compared with the losses by convection and conduction, which are less regular.

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  • If the vacuum jacket is silvered inside, radiation also is reduced to such an extent that, if the vacuum is really good, the external ice bath may be dispensed with for the majority of purposes.

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  • The solar radiation on this planet is nearly insensible.

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  • There are also other relevant links about such topics as nuclear reactors, natural nuclear reactors and background radiation.

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  • The question arises whether in a vacuum discharge, in which only a comparatively small proportion of the molecules are affected, we are to take the average radiation of the affected portion or include the whole lot of molecules, which at any moment are not concerned in the discharge at all.

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  • As there is undoubtedly a connexion between thermal motion and radiation, the energy of these electrons within the atom must be supposed to increase with temperature.

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  • This is consistent with Kirchhoff's law and shows that the sodium in a flame possesses the same relative radiation and absorption as sodium vapour heated thermally to the temperature of the flames.

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  • With a guess at the specific heat we might then calculate the maximum temperature to which the substance might be raised, if there were no loss by radiation or otherwise.

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  • Generally speaking, the radiation is not simple.

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  • The conductivity probably changes with temperature in the same way, being proportional to the product of the viscosity and the specific heat; but the experimental investigation presents difficulties on account of the necessity of eliminating the effects of radiation and convection, and the results of different observers often differ considerably from theory and from each other.

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  • Special Observations Were Made To Determine The Corrections For The Heat Supplied By Stirring, And That Lost By Radiation, Each Of Which Amounted To About To% Of The Heatsupply.

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  • Note, no sensing of UV or of ionizing radiation.

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  • The UV index is a way of indicating how strong the sun's harmful rays (radiation) are at various times of the day.

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  • This is a great bonus in addition to keeping the eyes safe from the ultra violet radiation.

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  • Other sources of ultraviolet radiation come from black-lights, fluorescent lamps, arc lamps (unfiltered) that utilize various elements such as mercury or xenon, and tungsten-halogen incandescent lamps.

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  • Photochromic Lenses protect the eyes from glare and UV radiation as well as bright sunlight.

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  • Generally the preferred choice of athletes, polycarbonate lenses protect from UV radiation; moreover, these lenses are such a stalwart defense that they can protect the eyes from physical injuries during sports.

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  • His definitely expressed view was that psychical activity is " nothing but a radiation through the cells of the grey substance of the brain of a motion set up by external stimuli."

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  • Increased direct effect of solar radiation compensates for the cold of the nights, and in the few spots where plants have been found in flower up to a height of 12,000 ft., nothing has indicated that the processes of vegetation were arrested by the severe cold which they must sometimes endure.

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  • Any contrivance that serves to interrupt radiation, though it may not keep the temperature much above freezing, will be found sufficient.

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  • In the Bessemer process, and indeed in most high-temperature processes, to operate on a large scale has, in addition to the usual economies which it offers in other industries, a special one, arising from the fact that from a large hot furnace or hot mass in general a very much smaller proportion of its heat dissipates through radiation and like causes than from a smaller body, just as a thin red-hot wire cools in the air much faster than a thick bar equally hot.

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  • Becquerel's observation in 1896 that certain uranium preparations emitted a radiation resembling the X rays observed by Rntgen in 1895.

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  • It also includes diffusion of heat by internal radiation, which must occur in transparent substances.

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  • In measuring conduction of heat in fluids, it is possible to some extent to eliminate the effects of molar convection or mixing, but it would not be possible to distinguish between diffusion, or internal radiation, and conduction.

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  • Weber's hypothesis of electric atoms, capable of diffusing through metallic bodies and conductors of electricity, but capable of vibration only in non-conductors, it is possible that the ultimate mechanism of conduction may be reduced in all cases to that of diffusion in metallic bodies or internal radiation in dielectrics.

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  • The equation of the method is the same as that for the linear flow with the addition of a small term representing the radiation loss.

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  • When covered pans are used, the loss of heat by radiation is less, and the salt made is also cleaner.

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  • The line of permanent snow is much higher on the plateau side in both ranges, the precipitation being greater on the outer sides - those facing the forested lowlands - and the terrestrial radiation being greater from the barren surfaces of the plateau.

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  • The relative humidity of the air along the shores of the Gulf is high, so that exposure to the direct and reflected rays of the sun and radiation from the hot soil are encountered in a moist atmosphere.

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  • In the second zone the climate is more temperate and there is considerable variation in temperature owing to nocturnal radiation.

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  • In any case, it is desirable to diminish the loss of heat as much as possible by polishing the exterior of the calorimeter to diminish radiation, and by suspending it by non-conducting supports, inside a polished case, to protect it from draughts.

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  • As the method is usually practised, the calorimeter is made very small, and the surface is highly polished to diminish radiation.

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  • If Hdo Is The Radiation Loss In Watts We Have The Equation, Ec=Jsqdo Hdo.

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  • It was shown by Homer Lane that a mass of gas held in equilibrium by the mutual gravitation of its parts actually grows hotter through radiating heat; the heat gained by the resulting contraction more than counterbalances that lost by radiation.

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  • C. Rntgen of Munich made in 1896 his remarkable discovery of the so-called X or Rntgen rays, a class of radiation produced by the impact of the cathode particles against an impervious metallic screen or anticathode placed in the vacuum tube.

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  • These yielded a remarkable extension of Pierre Provost's "Law of Exchanges," and enabled him to establish the fact that radiation is not a surface phenomenon, but takes place throughout the interior of the radiating body, and that the radiative and absorptive powers of a substance must be equal, not only for the radiation as a whole, but also for every constituent of it.

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  • When a patient is covered with several blankets, loss of heat from the surface both by radiation and evaporation is to a great extent prevented, but if a cradle be placed over him, so as to raise the bedclothes and allow of free circulation of air around his body, both radiation and evaporation will be increased and the temperature consequently lowered.

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  • When none of the radiations which fall on a body penetrates through its substance, then the ratio of the amount of radiation of a given wave-length which is absorbed to the total amount received is called the "absorptive power" of the body for that wave-length.

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  • Thus if the body absorbed half the incident radiation its absorptive power would be 2, and if it absorbed all the incident radiation its absorptive power would be r.

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  • The fraction of the incident radiation which is not absorbed by a body gives a measure of its reflecting power, with which we are not here concerned.

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  • On the other hand, those substances which either are good reflectors or good transmitters, are not so luminous at the same temperature; for instance, melted silver, which reflects well, is not so luminous as carbon at the same temperature, and common salt, which is very transparent for most kinds of radiation, when poured in a fused condition out of a bright red-hot crucible, looks almost like water, showing only a faint red glow for a moment or two.

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  • This fact may be expressed by saying that the radiation within a heated enclosure is the same as that of a perfectly black body.

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  • Its temperature must be dominated directly or indirectly by the surface radiation, and since the matter is gaseous and so open to redistribution, the same is true of density and pressure.

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  • Stefan's law of radiation according to the fourth power of the temperature is too difficult to pursue, but if we are content with cognate results we can follow them out mathematically in a hypothetical law of the first power.

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  • By this interchange the inner parts would be opened out and the total radiation raised.

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  • Since the only cause for these convection currents is the statical instability produced by radiation, and the rapid stifling of radiations within the body produces there a temperature gradient falling very slowly, they would be for the most part extremely slight.

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  • The latter is considered below; " The Black .,, it is i nd i cat i ve of the chemical elements from which the lines can proceed, and its state at the time of emission; the former is indicative only of the rate of loss of energy from the sun by radiation, and is inwoven with a remarkable group of physical theory and experiment, known as the theory of the black body, or as black radiation.

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  • The space within is filled with radiations corresponding to this temperature, and these attain a certain equilibrium which permits the energy of radiation to be spoken of as a whole, as a scalar quantity, without express reference to the propagation or interference of the waves of which it is composed.

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  • It will be seen that the maximum ordinates lie upon the curve A9 = constant dotted in the figure, and so, as the temperature of the ideal body rises, the wave-length of most intense radiation shifts from the infra-red X towards the luminous part of the spectrum.

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  • When we speak of the sun's radiation as a whole, it is assumed that it is of the character of the radiations from an ideal radiator at an appropriate temperature.

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  • The theory refers to radiation homogeneous at all points within a single closed boundary maintained at uniform temperature; in the actual case we have a double boundary, one the sun's surface, and the other infinitely remote, or say, non-existent, and at zero temperature; and it is assumed that the density of radiation in the free space varies inversely as the squares of the distance from the sun.

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  • The fact is that radiation is not a superficial phenomenon but a molar one, and Stefan's law, exact though it be, is not an ultimate theory but only a convenient halting-place, and the radiations of two bodies can only be compared by it when their surfaces are similar in a specific way.

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  • It seems possible that n is not a large number, and if we take x equal, say, to 200, we come to the most recent estimate - the astronomical - of the date of the earth's glacial epoch, when the sun's radiation was certainly not much more than it is now, while this factor would differ materially from unity.

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  • In consequence of the radiation of heat the whole body will be more condensed than before, but whether it is hotter or colder than before will depend on whether the contraction set up is more or less than enough to restore an exact balance.

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  • The movement towards contraction and consequent rise of temperature which radiation sets up, like other motions, overruns the equilibriumpoint, only however by a minute amount; the accumulated excesses from all past time now stored in the sun would maintain its radiations at their present rate for nX3000 years, that is, for a few thousand years only.

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  • If we suppose the sun's mass once existed in a state of extreme diffusion, the energy yielded by collecting it into its present compass would not suffice to maintain its present rate of radiation for more than 17,000,000 years in the past; nor if its mean density were ultimately to rise to eight times its present amount, for more than the same period in the future.

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  • If the sources of energy within the atom can be drawn upon, and the phenomena of radio-activity leave no doubt about this, there is here an incalculable source of heat which takes the cogency out of any other calculation respecting the sources maintaining the sun's radiation.

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  • A waterlogged soil is impenetrable by air, and owing to the continuous process of evaporation and radiation, its temperature is much below that of drained soil.

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  • There is another point of view from which mammals are of especial importance in regard to geographical distribution, namely their comparatively late rise and dispersal, or " radiation," as compared with reptiles.

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  • If eastern Central Asia were tentatively given as the centre of radiation of the group, this might perhaps best accord with the nature of the case.

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  • According to Tyndall, 9 0% of the radiation from the electric arc is non-luminous.

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  • The arc being struck in the usual way between two carbons, a concave mirror, placed close behind it, caused a large part of the radiation to be directed through an aperture in the camera and concentrated to a focus outside.

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  • Since the rays used by Tyndall in these experiments are similar to those emitted by a heated body which is not hot enough to be luminous, it might be thought that the radiation, say from a hot kettle, could be concentrated to a focus and employed to render a small body luminous.

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  • It would, however, be impossible by such means to raise the receiving body to a higher temperature than the source of radiation.

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  • Very, applied it to determine the moon's radiation at the Allegheny observatory.

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  • When Langley published his work the law of radiation as a function of the temperature was not yet established.

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  • Stefan's law of radiation, on the other hand, shows that the temperature must have been about the boilingpoint in order that the observed amount of heat might be radiated.

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  • This is in fair agreement with the computed temperature due to the sun's radiation upon a perpendicular absorbing surface when no temperature is lost through conduction to the interior.

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  • The agreement thus brought about between the results deduced from the law of radiation and the most delicate observa tions of the quantity of heat radiated is of great interest, as showing that the theory of cosmicai temperature now rests upon a sound basis.

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  • The recent discoveries growing out of the investigation of newly discovered forms of radiation lead to the conclusion that the question of the forms of matter in the stars has far wider range than the simple question whether any given element is or is not found outside our earth.

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  • With a modification to be mentioned presently, we may regard them as intensely hot bodies, probably at a temperature higher than any we can produce by artificial means, of which the superficial portions have cooled off by radiation into space.

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  • This subject is treated in the article Magneto-Optics, to which the reader is also referred for John Kerr's discovery of the effect on polarization produced by reflection from a magnetic pole, and for the action of a magnetic field on the radiation of a source - the "Zeeman effect."

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  • He also determined the effect of change of temperature distribution on the rate of generation of heat by the current; and on the external loss of heat by radiation, convection and conduction.

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  • Historically the unit was the rad derived from " radiation absorbed dose " .

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  • Also the metal spacecraft protected the astronauts from most of the radiation.

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  • It is also attenuated by dust, smoke, cloud or any medium which obscures radiation at that wavelength.

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  • One sees the imprint of these primordial fluctuations as small temperature perturbations in the cosmic microwave background radiation.

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  • This " horizon problem " makes it difficult to account for the uniformity of the cosmic background radiation.

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  • Study of the uncertainty in estimation of the exposure of non-human biota to ionizing radiation.

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  • This is called magnetic bremsstrahlung or synchrotron radiation (after radiation observed from particle accelerators by that name ).

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  • But the industry has the potential for accidental radiation releases and produces radioactive byproducts that require safe storage for decades.

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  • In normal cellphone use such glycoproteins diffuse laterally back again on cessation of the field or radiation.

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  • One possibility is to assume isotropic sky conditions at all times and so simplify computation since diffuse radiation is then independent of direction.

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  • Greater ionizing radiation from the Sun during those times also tends to produce more nuclei in the atmosphere for cloud condensation.

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  • Phycobilisomes appear to have been very advantageous to early cyanobacteria, evolving in shallow marine environments protected from UV radiation.

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  • Radioactivity The phenomenon whereby atoms undergo spontaneous random disintegration, usually accompanied by the emission of radiation.

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  • A person can receive a greater radiation dose on a plane flight to Spain then from an x-ray of the wrist or shoulder.

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  • This photograph shows an irradiator that is used at NPL to calibrate dosimeters for use in the radiation processing industry.

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  • Selection of the Trigger Point box brings up anatomical drawings showing the TP and pattern of pain radiation for a range of muscles.

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  • At the end of this process the remnant star will cease to emit radiation and will become a ' black dwarf ' .

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  • Radiation therapy is successful in relieving dysphagia in approximately 50% of patients.

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  • We know from classical electrodynamics that an accelerated charge emits radiation.

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  • The radiation emitted from a cluster comes from a very small fraction of the mass present.

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  • Radioactivity The property of radionuclides of spontaneously emitting ionizing radiation.

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  • The buntings exemplify local adaptive radiation, but may be hybridizing which could eventually produce a new species endemic to the island.

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  • The diagnosis of chronic radiation enteritis may be difficult to make.

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  • When in hydrostatic equilibrium and gravitational energy is its source of heat and radiation, it is called a pre-main sequence star.

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  • This makes up 50% of our total radiation exposure from all sources.

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  • His article is popular and he's for real but please, avoid radiation fallout affected food and water.

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  • All this caused by ionizing radiation fallout from the nuclear weapons.

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  • Personnel working with radar, X-ray equipment or near other sources of radiation wear radiation dosage film badges that detect their level of radiation.

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  • If a molecule which absorbs UV radiation does not fluoresce it means that it must have lost its energy some other way.

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  • Radiation Shielding (6 lectures) g (6 lectures) g -ray and neutron shielding calculations; g -ray attenuation and build-up factors.

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  • Ionizing radiation means gamma rays, x-rays etc., which directly or indirectly are capable of producing ions (charged particles ).

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  • Gamma Ray Astronomy Primary cosmic gamma ray Astronomy Primary cosmic gamma rays (300 GeV) are studied using the atmospheric Cerenkov radiation technique.

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  • In 1978 Durney et al., had compiled a Dosimetry handbook for radiofrequency radiation (Durney et al., 1978 ).

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  • Unexpectedly, the radiation hardness has been found to be worse than silicon under charged hadron irradiation.

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  • This absorption would in part produce hot spots from near field radiation.

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  • More infrared radiation reaches the detector resulting in crisp infrared radiation reaches the detector resulting in crisp infrared images.

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  • Urea is the main form in which nitrogen is excreted in mammals UV radiation invisible rays that are part of the electromagnetic spectrum.

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  • A standard dipole radiation pattern is not isotropic - it looks bit like a donut with the antenna in place of the hole.

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  • And how many were killed in the radiation leak?

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  • In order to deliver the radiation to the patient we use devices called medical linear accelerators, or " linacs " .

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  • These results have quite important meaning in the survey of genomic locus which is responsible for radiation hypersensitivity.

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  • Investigation of the effects of ionizing radiation on the physical properties of extracellular matrix macromolecules.

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  • Although there are huge benefits from regular mammography, there is an extremely small radiation risk associated with the examination.

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  • In fact, Eberlein says, sonoluminescence may represent the first observable manifestation of quantum vacuum radiation.

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  • After treatment with both radiation to the head and neck and intrathecal methotrexate the patient achieved complete symptom resolution.

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  • We carefully follow the current national guidelines for dental radiography and use modern, low radiation dose dental x-ray machines.

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  • For instance, chemicals in tobacco include mutagens, and several types of ionizing radiation have mutagenic effects.

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  • In its simplest form, seeds are exposed to radiation or chemical mutagens to cause random unpredictable genetic changes in crops.

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  • There is the risk of radiation necrosis of the skin.

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  • Ozone is a gas that prevents much noxious UV radiation from reaching the Earth's surface.

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  • Sun's energy is produced by nuclear fusion, which gives off electromagnetic radiation.

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  • Searches for elements with specific radiation energies or for specific nuclides are allowed.

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  • Reviewed by Alastair J Munro, professor of radiation oncology What is stomach cancer?

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  • He had manifested a gradual onset of upper back pain with radiation to the left chest wall for 3 months.

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  • Then the strong interacting particles experience additional radiation of soft or collinear partons described by means of the parton shower.

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  • Students should have an interest in experimental semiconductor physics and/or radiation physics, and in the application of radiation detectors to medical imaging.

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  • Patients who have received bleomycin are also at greater risk of radiation pneumonitis.

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  • Certain paints such as unsaturated polyester can be cured using radiation.

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  • This is comparatively puny slice, the potential for harm from radiation increases with frequency.

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  • In addition, CT exposes you to more ionizing radiation than do regular X-rays.

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  • Various body tissues absorb the radiation at different rates, causing various shadows to appear on the plate.

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  • X-ray - pictures of the bones taken using electromagnetic radiation.

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  • Destruction of the ozone layer results in an increase in the amount of harmful ultraviolet radiation reaching the Earth's surface.

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  • Green house gases absorb energy from the diffused solar radiation, which cause them to warm up.

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  • More infrared radiation reaches the detector resulting in crisp infrared images.

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  • Be able to describe the use of infra-red radiation in night photography.

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  • Much higher levels of direct investment by industry to synchrotron radiation sources are reported in the US.

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  • This chaotic motion may be caused by the powerful ultraviolet radiation from the luminous, massive stars.

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  • The Ozone layer which protects us from harmful gamma radiation has recently disappeared over the tip of South Africa.

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  • Know that ultra-violet radiation is produced in fluorescent lights.

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  • Trying to get info on health effects from microwave radiation.

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  • Similarly, more longwave radiation is emitted to space in the tropics than at high latitudes.

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  • This radiation reactance needs to be tuned out, to get power transfer from the generator to the radiated field.

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  • The polymer grid stays intact longer than a jute scrim shaded from ultra-violet radiation by vegetation to reinforce the root matrix of the turf.

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  • What is the largest wavelength of radiation that will be diffracted by a lattice plane of the interplanar spacing d?

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  • It absorbs solar ultraviolet radiation, which heats the stratosphere.

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  • Above the middle stratosphere the absorption of solar ultraviolet radiation by oxygen also becomes important.

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  • Late sequelae include strictures, chronic radiation enteritis, malabsorption, or gastrointestinal obstruction.

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  • Some areas of specialized knowledge such as water chemistry or radiation protection can be vital.

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  • We've only just begun looking for X-ray synchrotron radiation.

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  • These experiments are performed at several 3 rd generation synchrotron radiation sources throughout Europe.

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  • There are also UK requirements for a low energy synchrotron radiation source.

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  • Harford, J.J. & Squire, J.M. (1997) Time-resolved diffraction studies of muscle using synchrotron radiation.

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  • Other scientists have discovered why patients who undergo radiation therapy for brain, head or neck cancer suffer from some mental decline.

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  • External or internal radiation therapy can often cause damage to the salivary glands, leading to a permanently dry mouth.

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  • This will directly benefit users of radiation thermometry resulting in tighter process control with the associated environmental benefits.

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  • It also strips some material away from Io which forms a torus of intense radiation around Jupiter.

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  • This material becomes ionized in the magnetic field and forms a doughnut-shaped cloud of intense radiation referred to as a plasma torus.

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  • There is the further problem that radiation emitted is not a good tracer of mass, which is what we are most interested in.

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  • Water vapor in the upper troposphere has a very large impact on the radiation balance.

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  • Stratospheric ozone acts as a shield by absorbing potentially harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation which would otherwise reach the earth's surface.

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  • Sunlight consists of electromagnetic radiation of wavelengths from 20 microns at the far infrared end to 200 nanometres at the far ultraviolet end.

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  • Ozone is formed naturally in the upper stratosphere by short wavelength ultraviolet radiation.

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  • This features CWOP (Citizen Weather) data upload and support for solar radiation (Sun) sensors.

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  • This is to determine the role of ionizing radiation in the treatment of clinical posterior uveitis.

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  • Polyester fibers exposed to UV radiation will be considerably weakened over time.

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  • Exner attributes the double daily maximum, which is largely a consequence of the 12-hour wave, to a thin layer near the ground, which in the early afternoon absorbs the solar radiation of shortest wave length.

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  • If the atmosphere at different heights is exposed to ionizing radiation of uniform intensity the rate of production of ions per cc., q, will vary as the pressure.

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  • Special experiments were made to determine the work done against resistances outside the vessel of water, which amounted to about 006 of the whole, and corrections were made for the loss of heat by radiation, the buoyancy of the air affecting the descending weights, and the energy dissipated when the weights struck the floor with a finite velocity.

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  • Bellini and Tosi, who have devised instruments, called radiogonimeters, for projecting radiation in required directions and locating the azimuth of a transmitting station.

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  • He was distinguished as the discoverer of radioactivity, having found in 1896 that uranium at ordinary temperatures emits an invisible radiation which in many respects resembles Rรƒยถntgen rays, and can affect a photographic plate after passing through thin plates of metal.

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  • These low temperatures are evidently caused by the radiation of heat from the snow-surface in the rarefied air in the interior.

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  • The radiation passing out from an opening in the furnace falls upon a concave mirror in a telescope and is focused upon a thermoelectric couple.

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  • In ordinary reverberatory and other heating furnaces the burning fuel is without the mass, so that the vessel containing the charge, and other parts of the plant, are raised to a higher temperature than would otherwise be necessary, in order to compensate for losses by radiation, convection and conduction.

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  • If heat passes " of itself " from a higher to a lower temperature by conduction, convection or radiation, the transfer cannot be reversed without an expenditure of work.

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  • The temperature of a gas is measured by the mean energy of translation of its molecules, which are independent of each other except during the brief intervals of collision; and collision of the separate molecules with the blackened surface of a vane, warmed by the radiation, imparts heat to them, so that they rebound from it with greater velocity than they approached.

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  • Great irregular variations in radiation and convection sometimes produce a remarkably abrupt change of temperature at a certain depth in calm water; the layer in which this sudden change occurs has been termed the Sprungschicht.

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  • Towards the end of summer the upper layers have been warmed to a depth which indicates how far the influence of solar radiation and convection have reached.

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  • Hagen that for dark heat rays of only about ten times the wave-length of luminous radiation, the properties of metals are determined by their electric resistance alone, which then masks all resonance due to periods of free vibration of the molecules; and, moreover, that the resistance for such alternations is practically the same as the ohmic resistance for ordinary steady currents.

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  • Becquerel's observation in 1896 that certain uranium preparations emitted a radiation resembling the X rays observed by Rรƒยถntgen in 1895.

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  • The heat generated by the current C at a point x where the temperature-excess is 0 is equal per unit length and time (t) to that lost by conduction -d(gkdo/dx)/dx, and by radiation hpo (emissivity h, perimeter p), together with that employed in raising the temperature gcdo/dt, and absorbed by the Thomson effect sCdo/dx.

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  • C. Rรƒยถntgen of Munich made in 1896 his remarkable discovery of the so-called X or Rรƒยถntgen rays, a class of radiation produced by the impact of the cathode particles against an impervious metallic screen or anticathode placed in the vacuum tube.

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  • If we are dealing with comparatively recent periods there is no evidence of progressive change, but if we go to remote epochs and suppose the sun to have once been diffused in a nebulous state, it is clear that its shrinkage, in spite of radiation, has left it hotter, so that the shrinkage has outrun what would suffice to maintain its radiation.

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  • Sunscreens for plants protects them from ultraviolet and infrared radiation.

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  • Finding the powerful quasars responsible for the X-ray background radiation.

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  • Destruction of the ozone layer results in an increase in the amount of harmful ultraviolet radiation reaching the Earth 's surface.

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  • Cosmic radiation also keeps us alive - thanks to all those photons which make it through from the sun.

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  • X-ray radiation can be generated using radioisotope sources or X-ray tubes.

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  • The primary goal of the Experimental Radiation Therapeutics Group is the preclinical and early clinical development of radiopharmaceutical agents for the treatment of cancer.

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  • This has consequences for the radiation dose rate to the skin from radon decay products which is much higher outdoors compared with indoors.

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  • The entire process takes place inside a heavy shielded reactor compartment that completely protects the crew from radiation.

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  • The radiation was isotropic and it corresponded to a temperature that was consistent with red-shifted radiation from the Big Bang.

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  • Low density material allows greater radiation to reach the scintillation detector.

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  • The electron wave is created by exciting a core hole electron with synchrotron radiation or x-rays.

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  • We 've only just begun looking for X-ray synchrotron radiation.

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  • Strong deliberate efforts must be made to ease the utilization of the national synchrotron radiation facilities for industrial research (17).

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  • It covers radiation detection, cadmium zinc telluride detectors and X-ray fluorescence.

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  • To generate and detect terahertz radiation using tabletop sources, complementing 4GLS work at Daresbury.

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  • These considerations do not mean the radiation arrow reduces in any sense to the thermodynamic arrow.

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  • For example, radiation dose from modern computed tomography scanners may be in excess of that produced by older models.

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  • This technique uses the properties of synchrotron radiation, i.e. linearly polarized and tunable radiation.

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  • Turnstile antennas are commonly used as transmitting antennas when horizontal polarization is required together with omnidirectional radiation.

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  • In this Center, ultrashort pulse lasers are used to manipulate atoms and molecules and to generate non-classical radiation using non-linear optical processes.

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  • Stratospheric ozone acts as a shield by absorbing potentially harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation which would otherwise reach the earth 's surface.

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  • An increased risk of skin cancer in psoriatic patients treated with a combination of coal tar and UVB radiation has been reported.

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  • He also has a vagus nerve stimulator implant that he thought might be affected by any radiation from a computer.

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  • Ultra violet radiation A small part of the radiation from the sun which can cause skin cancer.

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  • By tracing how the wavelength of the radiation varies we can measure the velocity of the Hydrogen, using the Doppler shift.

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  • Unless it is exposed to longer wavelength ultraviolet radiation it seems to have little action.

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  • Resources such as solar radiation, hydroelectricity, wind and the tides are all easily replenished resources.

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  • They are basically large, flat devices that collect solar radiation and convert that energy to electrical energy.

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  • The problem with these early cells was that they could only convert a certain "band" or wavelength of solar radiation.

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  • Levels of natural solar radiation vary, and with that variation the level of power produced by photovoltaic cells also varies.

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  • Since solar radiation is unlimited in space, these inefficient solar cells were more than enough to power satellite electrical systems.

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  • Although this blocking action might appear to reduce solar radiation, the opposite is true.

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  • These patches give off greater than normal radiation, and they are more powerful than the darker, cooler patches.

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  • Most man-made causes of global warming result from an increase in greenhouse gases, which are gases that trap or absorb infrared radiation emitted from the planet.

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  • Greenhouse gases are those that absorb and emit infrared radiation, significantly affecting the planet's temperature.

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  • For passive design, this involves the natural methods of conduction, convention and radiation, which you may recall from science class.

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  • In certain areas, the chemicals create holes that allow ultraviolet rays to make it through the atmosphere to the Earth where the radiation causes damage to plants and wildlife and increases the risk of skin cancer in humans.

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  • While efforts are made to contain the radiation produced during the fission process, and containment systems are in place to help prevent leaks and contamination, nuclear energy does have its drawbacks.

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  • Cracks in the cement, failure of the pipe system, which brings in clean water and other systems failures can lead to dangerous amounts of radiation being leaked into nearby communities.

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  • Since uranium is an unstable element, this leaves a great deal of room for error, radiation leaks and risks fission happening too soon, where it cannot be contained.

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  • This can be dangerous, since the waste products can be unstable, produce radiation if not properly sealed and pose a threat from terrorists that may wish to convert this waste into weaponry.

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  • The use of direct solar power requires only one step, called electromagnetic radiation, in order to convert solar energy into useable power.

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  • Northern states and New England do not receive the same amount of daily solar radiation.

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  • By using a method called photovoltaics, researchers found they can generate electrical power by funneling the sun through a specific medium like copper or silicon to harness the energy from solar radiation.

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  • However, the benefits are known to outweigh the risks for people who live in areas that garner at least the national average of solar radiation per year.

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  • He says doctors gave him the option of radiation (chemo), but thought having it removed would be the better choice.

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  • She underwent a lumpectomy and radiation treatment.

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  • She followed the surgery with radiation therapy and was soon declared cancer free.

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  • This new heating device uses electromagnetic radiation to heat the human body from the inside out, similar to how warmth is received from the sun.

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  • Although it is not common, radiation is sometimes used to deepen the pink color of Kunzite gemstones.

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  • Some practitioners use citrine to counter the effects of radiation exposure and aid digestion in the absorption of minerals and antioxidants.

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  • The USDA defines organic as "food produced without using synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, bioengineering and radiation."

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  • Irradiated food is exposed to radiation, either through gamma rays, x-rays or electron beams, in an effort to kill microorganisms that can cause it to rot.

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  • Another problem with irradiation is that it is still up for debate whether traces of radiation remain in the food after it is treated.

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  • In addition, these foods cannot be made with prohibited methods such as ionizing radiation.

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  • The problem is that exposure to ultraviolet (UV) rays cause a form of radiation which alters the cellular integrity of skin cells.

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  • The sun's rays emit ultraviolet (UV) radiation, which damages the outer layer of the skin.

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  • To combat the effects of UV radiation, a sunscreen product with a Sun Protection Factor (SPF) of 30 or higher should be applied 15 or 20 minutes before venturing outside.

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  • In fact, according to Johnson and Johnson, the makers of the contacts, the pair will block anywhere from 82 percent of UVA radiation and up to 97 perfect of UVB radiation.

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  • This type of radiation contributes to premature aging, wrinkling and has recently been linked to skin cancer.

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  • While such a reflective coating will not block UV radiation (that's what UV coating is for), it will protect your eyes from the strain of dealing with high-glare, or very bright light conditions.

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  • When treated with a UV resistant coating, glass and plastic (CR-39) lenses are all capable of blocking UV radiation.

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  • Now that the damage of UV radiation is so well documented in the scientific community, it also stands to reason that we must protect the delicate eyes and skin of both babies and children.

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  • This sporty style can be worn for work or play with a 99.9 percent UVA/UVB (Ultraviolet A and B forms of radiation) protection.

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  • The Grand Canyon is an amazing natural wonder - however, in the summer it is a giant bowl that collects solar radiation from the sun, catapulting temperatures to well over 105 degrees Fahrenheit.

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  • Motorola VE465 is a rugged flip phone with an external display, multimedia controls, 1.3 megapixel camera, and military reistance to dust, vibration, solar radiation and altitude.

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  • For example, the radiation emitted from a microwave may affect your mobile phone reception.

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  • Additionally, the editors test the batteries and give you the results of the FCC radiation tests.

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  • Given the widespread fear of cell phone radiation causing a range of health problems, it's understandable that many consumers were concerned over this recall.

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  • Radiation is believed to cause 1 to 2 percent of all cancer deaths.

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  • Other sources of radiation are x-rays, radon gas, and ionizing radiation from nuclear material.

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  • Surgery may be performed in conjunction with radiation (cytoreductive surgery) or chemotherapy.

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  • Radiation kills tumor cells and is used alone when a tumor is in a poor location for surgery.

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  • Radiation can be either external or internal.

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  • External radiation is aimed at the tumor from outside the body.

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  • In internal radiation (brachytherapy), radioactive liquid or pellets are delivered to the cancerous site via a pill, injection, or insertion in a sealed container.

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  • Chemotherapeutic drugs are given orally or intravenously, either alone or in conjunction with surgery, radiation, or both.

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  • When chemotherapy is used before surgery or radiation, it is known as primary chemotherapy or neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

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  • Chemotherapy may also make the body less tolerant of the side effects of other treatments such as radiation therapy.

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  • Sometimes drugs or radiation needed to destroy cancer cells also destroys bone marrow and only replacement with healthy cells counteracts this adverse effect.

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  • The oncologist is a physician who specializes in cancer care and usually coordinates the treatment plan, directing chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and any treatment that does not involve radiation or surgery.

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  • The radiation oncologist uses radiation to treat cancer, while the surgical oncologist performs surgery to diagnose or treat cancer.

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  • A range of alternative treatments are available to help treat cancer that can be used in conjunction with, or separate from, surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation.

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  • Homeopathy and herbal remedies used in Chinese traditional herbal medicine also have been shown to alleviate some of the side effects of radiation and chemotherapy and are being recommended by many doctors.

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  • Radiation therapy-A cancer treatment that uses high-energy rays or particles to kill or weaken cancer cells.

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  • Radiation may be delivered externally or internally via surgically implanted pellets.

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  • Some brain tumors and tumors along the nerves, can be surgically removed or treated with chemotherapeutic drugs or x-ray treatments (radiation therapy).

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  • Exposure to ionizing radiation and to certain organic chemicals, such as benzene, is believed to increase the risk of developing leukemia.

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  • Radiation therapy, which involves the use of x-rays or other high-energy rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors, may be used in some cases.

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  • For acute leukemias, the source of radiation is usually outside the body (external radiation therapy).

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  • If the leukemic cells have spread to the brain, radiation therapy can be given to the brain.

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  • First, the patient's bone marrow is destroyed with very high doses of chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

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  • The marrow remaining in the patient's body is destroyed with high-dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

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  • People who are at an increased risk for developing leukemia because of proven exposure to ionizing radiation or exposure to the toxic liquid benzene, and people with Down syndrome, should undergo periodic medical checkups.

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  • Treatment is usually a combination of surgery, medications used to kill cancer cells (chemotherapy), and x rays or other high-energy rays used to kill cancer cells (radiation therapy).

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  • It has long been known that Wilms' tumors respond to radiation therapy.

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  • Stage I involves favorable Wilms' tumor cells and is usually treated successfully with combination chemotherapy involving dactinomycin and vincristine and without abdominal radiation therapy.

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  • Stage III tumors with favorable histology are usually treated with a combination chemotherapy with doxorubicin, dactinomycin, and vincristine along with radiation therapy to the abdomen.

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  • These patients usually receive abdominal radiation therapy and lung radiation therapy if the tumor has spread to the lungs.

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  • These patients also receive lung radiation therapy if the tumor has spread to the lungs.

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  • All of these patients receive abdominal radiation therapy and lung radiation therapy if the tumor has spread to the lungs.

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  • Radiation therapy is rarely used, and special drugs may be prescribed for skin symptoms.

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  • Subsequently, birth defects as a result of exposure to Agent Orange, the U.S. defoliant used in Vietnam, and radiation exposure near the site of the Chernobyl disaster in Russia have left numerous children with malformed or absent limbs.

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  • However, if a doctor suspects that the fetus is at risk for developing a limb deficiency (for example, if the mother has been exposed to radiation), a more detailed ultrasound examination may be performed.

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  • Ultraviolet radiation such as that which occurs with a welder's flash or use of a sunlamp, can also cause an abrasion, as well as misuse and mishandling of contact lenses.

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  • X rays are electromagnetic radiation that differentially penetrates structures within the body and creates images of these structures on photographic film or a fluorescent screen.

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  • X rays are a form of radiation similar to light rays, except that they are more energetic than light rays and are invisible to the human eye.

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  • Although many images are taken to produce a CT scan, the total dose of radiation the individual is exposed to is low.

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  • Although unnecessary exposure to radiation should be avoided, the low levels of radiation one is exposed to during an x ray does not cause harm with a few exceptions.

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  • There is an increased risk that a developing fetus will develop leukemia during childhood if exposed to x-ray radiation; pregnant or potentially pregnant women should avoid x rays.

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  • Some parents are concerned about health consequences of their child's exposure to x-ray radiation.

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  • However, doses of radiation received in most x rays are quite similar to the environmental (background) radiation one is exposed to simply by living on Earth.

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  • Her exposure to industrial chemicals, solvents, and ionizing radiation (x ray) also increases the risk of having children with congenital heart defects.

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  • Lomotil, another antidiarrheal medication, contains a synthetic opioid known as diphenoxylate; it is often recommended for treating cancer patients with diarrhea caused by radiation therapy.

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  • A bone that has been broken or exposed to high doses of radiation used to treat other cancers is more likely than other bones to develop osteosarcoma.

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  • Radiation therapy is used often to treat Ewing's sarcoma.

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  • Postsurgical radiation and chemotherapy add years to their lives.

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  • Nutritional supplements can build strength and help maintain it during and following chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery.

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  • Ultraviolet A is long-wave radiation generated by the sun that penetrates more deeply than UVB, causes wrinkling and leathering of the skin and damages connective tissue.

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  • Persons with immune deficiency diseases and/or those whose immunity has been suppressed with anti-cancer drugs, corticosteroids, or radiation should not receive the vaccine.

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  • Radiation therapy and cancer drugs may reduce the effectiveness of many vaccines or may increase the chance of side effects.

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  • This test exposes the child to less radiation than does a standard VCUG.

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  • Doppler ultrasound techniques were as of 2004 under study as a radiation exposure-free alternative to VCUG.

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  • The remaining RB1 gene can become non-functional when exposed to environmental triggers such as chemicals and radiation.

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  • It can also sometimes help guide treatment choices, since patients with an inherited form of retinoblastoma may be at increased risk for developing recurrent tumors or other types of cancers, particularly when treated with radiation.

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  • Radiation therapy is often used for treatment of large tumors when preservation of sight is possible.

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  • External beam radiation therapy involves focusing a beam of radiation on the eye.

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  • If the tumor has not spread extensively, the radiation beam can be focused on the cancerous retinal cells.

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  • If the cancer is extensive, radiation treatment of the entire eye may be necessary.

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  • External beam radiation is performed on an outpatient basis and usually occurs over a period of three to four weeks.

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  • Long-term side effects of radiation treatment can include cataracts, vision problems, bleeding from the retina, and decreased growth of the bones on the side of the head.

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  • Photocoagulation therapy is often used in conjunction with radiation therapy but may be used alone to treat small tumors that are located on the back of the eye.

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  • Thermotherapy is also often used in conjunction with radiation therapy or drug therapy (chemotherapy).

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  • Cryotherapy is a treatment often used in conjunction with radiation therapy but can also be used alone on small tumors located on the front part of the retina.

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  • Chemotherapy is sometimes used to shrink tumors prior to other treatments such as radiation therapy or brachytherapy.

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  • If the tumor is small enough, other therapies such as external beam radiation therapy, photocoagulation, cryotherapy, thermotherapy, chemotherapy, and brachytherapy may be considered.

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  • If vision can be preserved in both eyes, radiation therapy of both eyes may be recommended.

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  • Some centers may use chemotherapy in place of radiation therapy when the tumors are too large to be treated by local therapies or are found over the optic nerve of the eye.

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  • As of the early 2000s, many centers are moving away from radiation treatment and toward chemotherapy because it is less likely to induce future tumors.

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  • Commonly, radiation treatment of the eyes and chemotherapy is provided.

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  • People with an inherited form of retinoblastoma who have not undergone radiation treatment have approximately a 26 percent chance of developing cancer in another part of the body within 50 years of the initial diagnosis.

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  • Those with an inherited form who have undergone radiation treatment have a 58 percent chance of developing a secondary cancer within 50 years after the initial diagnosis.

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  • Chemotherapy may be given before surgery or radiation therapy to shrink the tumor (neoadjuvant therapy).

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  • When a cancer has been removed by surgery or treated with radiation therapy, chemotherapy may be used to keep the cancer from coming back (adjuvant therapy).

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  • Chemotherapy usually is given in addition to other cancer treatments, such as surgery and radiation therapy.

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  • Chest x ray-Brief exposure of the chest to radiation to produce an image of the chest and its internal structures.

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  • Although no side effects have been linked to radiation exposure from CT imaging, the Food and Drug Administration has issued guidance to physicians regarding levels of radiation during pediatric CT examinations.

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  • New CT scanners have preset imaging features that allow scanning at the lowest radiation dose for the child's weight and age.

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  • Radiation exposure is a risk during CT examinations.

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  • However, the radiation from a CT scan is usually less than that from regular x rays, and the benefits of the examination far outweigh the minor radiation dose received during the scan.

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  • To reduce risk of radiation exposure, anyone remaining in the scanning room during x-ray delivery will have to wear a lead apron on shield.

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  • For example, exposure to ionizing radiation and to certain organic chemicals, such as benzene, is believed to increase the risks for getting leukemia.

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  • The marrow remaining in the patient's body is then destroyed with high dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

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  • Low dose radiation therapy may be given to the whole body, or it may be used to alleviate the symptoms and discomfort due to an enlarged spleen and lymph nodes.

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  • Radiation therapy, which involves the use of x rays or other high-energy rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors, may be used in some cases to reduce the discomfort and pain due to an enlarged spleen.

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  • For chronic leukemias, the source of radiation is usually outside the body (external radiation therapy).

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  • If the leukemic cells have spread to the brain, radiation therapy can be directed at the brain.

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  • They have had cancer treatments, including radiation or drugs.

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  • Radiopaque dyes, radiocontrast media-Injected substances that are used to outline tissues and organs in some x-ray and other radiation procedures.

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  • In cancer patients, treatment with radiation therapy or chemotherapy may affect the cells in the intestine that normally secrete lactase, leading to intolerance.

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  • Some patients who cannot undergo surgery are treated with radiation therapy to the pituitary in an attempt to shrink the adenoma.

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  • Radiation. Radioactive iodine used to treat hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) or radiation treatments for head or neck cancers can destroy the thyroid gland.

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  • In some cases, hemorrhagic cystitis is a side effect of radiation therapy or treatment with cyclophosphamide.

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  • Immune system-suppressing treatments, including cancer drugs and radiation and steroids, can interfere with the antibody response to rabies vaccination.

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  • This method does not expose children to radiation.

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  • Ultrasound waves utilized in detecting the FHR and for the BPP are painless and safe because this method employs no harmful radiation.

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  • Burns are injuries to tissues that are caused by heat, friction, electricity, radiation, or chemicals.

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  • Sunburn is an inflammation of the skin caused by overexposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun.

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  • Both UVA and UVB radiation play a role in the development of a form of skin cancer called malignant melanoma.

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  • Metastasis is very serious in MTC because chemotherapy and radiation therapy are not effective in controlling its spread.

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  • Exposure to radiation and hazardous chemicals may also damage the immune system.

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  • Excessive radiation of diagnostic x rays of the neck and chest may damage the thymus gland behind the breastbone.

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  • The Sedu straightening iron uses ceramic tourmaline plates combined with infrared radiation in order to achieve a frizz free effect without breaking the hair.

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  • Sadako Sasaki was a young Japanese girl who was dying of leukemia from the radiation associated with the Hiroshima bombing.

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  • Chemicals, radiation, and other environmental hazards are thought to limit your chances of becoming pregnant.

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  • Having cancer can make secondary infertility a concern for many women since radiation, chemotherapy, and drug treatments may affect a woman's reproductive system.

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  • In some cases, if the cancer is simply near the reproductive organs or if cancer treatment encompasses the whole body, fertility could be adversely affected from radiation and chemotherapy.

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  • Both radiation and chemotherapy can stop sperm production.

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  • Radiation that gets absorbed by the ovaries may do so much damage that a woman no longer has viable eggs.

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  • Ultraviolet rays (UV) are an invisible form of radiation found in sunlight, and over-exposure to UV light can cause significant eye damage, resulting in a loss of vision, and the possible formation of cataracts.

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  • During these tests, UV light is pointed at the clothing in question and the radiation transmitted through the garment is calculated.

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  • Japan is the birthplace of Godzilla, a giant fictional monster created by atomic radiation.

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  • Vitamin D3 is the form of vitamin D found in animal product food sources and from the skin's exposure to sunlight, particularly to UV B radiation.

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  • Ultraviolet radiation from the sun is one of the main causes of damage to the skin.

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  • Excessive exposure to ultraviolet radiation can result in wrinkles, discoloration and even melanoma.

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  • Using a topical vitamin E cream in conjunction with sunscreen can increase the effectiveness of the sunscreen, which blocks the harmful effects of UV radiation.

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  • Many were fearful of the radiation technology because they thought they would get radiation poisoning.

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  • The derived electricity from the wall outlet passes through the power cord and then through several protection devices before being converted into microwave radiation.

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  • Wig recipients come from all different backgrounds, from older men to little children who have lost their hair due to chemotherapy and radiation treatments.

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  • This process involves first exposing the diamond to radiation and then to high heat.

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  • Other factors, such as radiation present during formation or twists in the crystal structure of the stone can also affect a diamond's color.

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  • Green diamonds (one of the rarest) are created as the diamond absorbs specific types of nuclear radiation during its formation.

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  • Some of the blue diamonds available in today's marketplace are actually yellow diamonds, which have been treated by radiation to produce the blue color, while most diamonds that are blue in color come from the Cullinan mines.

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  • A theory often associated with the 2012 prophecy is that a mega solar flare will blast the earth sending bursts of radiation pulsing toward the planet.

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  • The only way you could survive such a blast of radiation would be if you were several feet underground.

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  • Another version of the solar flare theory foregoes the blast of radiation.

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  • People won't die of radiation, but the results will be just as catastrophic with the world's power grids going offline.

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  • Tanning is the body's natural response to protect it from UV radiation; a shield, if you will, to avoid absorbing more of those rays.

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  • Since chemotherapy and radiation kill human cells, a macrobiotic diet can help replenish cells.

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  • He had already watched his mother die from the disease, and he wanted to find an alternative to the chemotherapy and radiation treatments that she had endured.

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  • Likewise, if you are still undergoing chemotherapy or radiation treatments, ask if the insurance company will continue to cover the rest of your scheduled treatments.

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  • She also went through several rounds of chemotherapy and radiation treatment.

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  • The titular "King of the Monsters" debuted in 1954 as a rampaging mutant dinosaur, created as a byproduct of nuclear radiation.

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  • The popularity of this monster brought him back again in 1993 as a larger version mutated by radiation and able to emit a uranium heat beam.

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  • The world is doomed, until a full-size Godzilla Junior made a theatrical entrance and saved the planet by absorbing the deadly radiation.

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  • This is actually the body's response to ultraviolet radiation injury.

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  • I believe tanning beds are extremely unsafe as they use lightbulbs that simulate the ultraviolet radiation from the sun.

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  • When undergoing or recovering from chemotherapy or radiation, it is important to use specially formulated creams and lotions to protect and heal the skin, and Lindi cancer skin care products are some of the best.

    0
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  • Chemotherapy and radiation therapy can cause a number of side effects to the skin, predominantly an excess of dryness and sensitivity.

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  • Sometimes a skin cancer patient will have to undergo radiation or chemotherapy even after a successful surgery.

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  • With radiation therapy, the individual is subjected to radiation beams, which help to kill cancerous cells and make tumors smaller.

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  • Sunscreen protects the skin from damaging ultraviolet radiation (UV).

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  • It's important to note that the United States government has added UV radiation to the list of known human carcinogens.

    0
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  • Melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, is linked to UV radiation.

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  • An open fire acts by radiation; it warms the air in a room by first warming the walls, floor, ceiling and articles in the room, and these in turn warm the air.

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  • They present to the fierce play of the sun almost a level surface, so that during the day that surface becomes intensely heated and at night gives off its heat by radiation.

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  • Taking into account the heat absorbed by the box and the metal, Rumford calculated that the heat developed was sufficient to raise 26.58 lb of water from the freezing to the boiling point, and in this calculation the heat lost by radiation and conduction was neglected.

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  • What is required is some means for localizing and directing a beam of radiation.

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  • The radiations interfere in an optical sense of the word, and in some directions reinforce each other and in other directions neutralize each other, so making the resultant radiation greater in some directions than others.

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  • In all cases of wave motion the wave-length is connected with the velocity of propagation of the radiation by the relation v=nX, where n is the frequency of the oscillations and X is the wave-length.

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  • The loose material may, and in an arid region does, consist only of portions of the higher parts of the surface detached by the expansion and contraction produced by heating and cooling due to radiation.

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  • The amount of the sun's heat has been estimated, but we receive on the earth less than one two-thousand-millionth part of the whole radiation.

    0
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  • It would take 20 tons of coal a day burned on each square foot of the sun's surface to supply the daily radiation.

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  • Even if the sun were made of one mass of fuel as efficient as coal, that mass must be entirely expended in a few thousand years if the present rate of radiation was to be sustained.

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  • In the winter similar consequences ensue, in a negative direction, from the prolonged loss of heat by radiation in the long and clear nights - an effect which is intensified wherever the surface is covered with snow, or the air little charged with vapour.

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  • The connexion that seemed to be first established was between variations in the quantity of water transported from the tropical to the sub-polar Atlantic and variations in the intensit y of solar radiation.

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  • Helland-Hansen and Nansen showed later that it was improbable that variations in the northerly drift of Atlantic water could be traced directly to variations in the quantity of heat received by the sea from solar radiation.

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  • This phenomenon he explained as a "repulsion from radiation," and he expressed his discovery in the statement that in a vessel exhausted of air a body tends to move away from another body hotter than itself.

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  • Its foreshore consists of a great expanse of firm, bright sands, and the mildness of its winter climate is attributed to the radiation of heat from them.

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  • In the Fery radiation pyrometer this difficulty is obviated, as the instrument may be placed at a considerable distance from the furnace.

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  • Several modifications were proposed, in one of which, intended for the heating of non-conducting substances, the electrodes were passed horizontally through perforations in the upper part of the crucible walls, and the charge in the lower part of the crucible was heated by radiation.

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  • Depending on the fact that the electrical conductivity of a metallic conductor is decreased by heat, it consists of two strips of platinum, arranged to form the two arms of a Wheatstone bridge; one strip being exposed to a source of radiation from which the other is shielded, the heat causes a change in the resistance of one arm, the balance of the bridge is destroyed, and a deflection is marked on the galvanometer.

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  • It had been remarked at various times, amongst others by Fresnel, that bodies delicately suspended within a partial vacuum are subject to apparent repulsion by radiation.

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  • When the rays of the sun or a candle, or dark radiation from a warm body, are incident on the vanes, the dark side of each vane is repelled more than the bright side, and thus the vanes are set into rotation with accelerated speed, which becomes uniform when the forces produced by the radiation are balanced by the friction of the pivot and of the residual air in the globe.

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  • The name radiometer arose from an idea that the final steady speed of rotation might be utilized as a rough measure of the intensity of the exciting radiation.

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  • The answer to this was found experimentally by Arthur Schuster, who suspended the whole instrument in delicate equilibrium, and observed the effect of introducing the radiation.

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  • By thus controlling and partially eliminating the aggregate gas-effect, they succeeded in making a small radiometer, horizontally suspended, into a delicate and reliable measurer of the intensity of the radiation incident on it.

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  • Hull; some months earlier Lebedew had published in the Annalen der Physik a verification for metallic vanes so thin as to avoid the gasaction, by preventing the production of sensible difference of temperature between the two faces by the incident radiation.

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  • Poynting has separated the two effects experimentally on the principle that the radiometer pressure acts along the normal, while the radiation pressure acts along the ray which may be directed obliquely.

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  • The warming of the ocean is due practically to solar radiation alone; such heat as may be received from the interior of the earth can only produce a small effect and is fairly uniformly distributed.

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  • The penetration of warmth from the surface is effected by direct radiation, and by convection by particles rendered dense by evaporation increasing salinity.

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  • Great irregular variations in radiation and convection sometimes produce a remarkably abrupt change of temperature at a certain depth in calm water.

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  • Yet Christian orthodoxy, which itself has, all but uniformly, understood this passage of the spiritual radiation throughout the world of the Word before His incarnation, has been aided towards such breadth as to the past by the Johannine outlook into the future.

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  • At sunset, too, after a warm day, if the air is still, the cooling of the earth by radiation cools the lower layers, and sound carries excellently over a level surface.

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  • As, however, our terrestrial optical apparatus is now all in motion along with the matter, we must dealt .with the rays relative to the moving system, and to these also Fermat's principle clearly applies; thus V+ (lu'--mv'-Fnw') is here the velocity of radiation in the direction of the ray, but relative to the moving material system.

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  • This theory secures that the times of passage of the rays shall be independent of the motion of the system, only up to the first order of the ratio of its velocity to that of radiation.

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  • Poynting may also be mentioned, in which the tangential component of the thrust of obliquely incident radiation is separately put in evidence, by the torsion produced in an arrangement which is not sensitive to the normal component or to the radiometer-pressure of the residual gas.

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  • The eldest, Lawrence Parsons, 4th earl of Rosse, and Baron Oxmantown, born on the 17th of November 1840, succeeded to the title on his father's death, and made many investigations on the heavenly bodies, particularly on the radiation of the moon and related physical questions; the youngest, the Hon.

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  • He especially devoted himself to investigations of the radiation of heat from the sun and its absorption by the earth's atmosphere, and to that end devised various delicate methods and instruments, including his electric compensation pyrheliometer, invented in 1893, and apparatus for obtaining a photographic representation of the infra-red spectrum (1895).

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  • Starting with the stem forms the descendants of which have passed through either persistent or changed habitats, we reach the underlying idea of the branching law of Lamarck or the law of divergence of Darwin, and find it perhaps most clearly expressed in the words "adaptive radiation" (Osborn), which convey the idea of radii in many directions.

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  • We observe the contemporaneous and largely independent radiations of the hoofed animals in South America, in Africa and in the great ancient continent comprising Europe, Asia and North America; we observe the Cretaceous radiation of hoofed animals in the northern hemisphere, followed by a second radiation of hoofed animals in the same region, in some cases one surviving spur of an old radiation becoming the centre of a new one.

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  • As a rule, the larger the geographic theatre the grander the radiation.

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  • Successive discoveries have revealed certain grand centres, such as (1) the marsupial radiation of Australia, (2) the littleknown Cretaceous radiation of placental mammals in the northern hemisphere, which was probably connected in part with the peopling of South America, (3) the Tertiary placental radiation in the northern hemisphere, partly connected with Africa, (4) the main Tertiary radiation in South America.

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  • This result, which, accepting the possibility of having an absolutely opaque enclosure of uniform temperature, was clearly proved by Balfour Stewart for the total radiation, was further extended by Kirchhoff, who applied it (though not with mathematical rigidity as is sometimes supposed) to the separate wave-lengths.

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  • All Kirchhoff's further conclusions are based on the assumption that the radiation transmitted through a partially transparent body can be expressed in term,s.

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  • It is assumed further that the absorption is proportional to the incident radiation and (at any rate approximately) independent of the temperature, while the radiation is assumed to be a function of the temperature 6 Phil.

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  • This division into absorption and radiation is to some extent artificial and will have to be revised when the.

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  • For our present purpose it is only necessary to point out the difficulty involved in the assumption that the radiation of a body is independent of the temperature of the enclosure.

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  • When the molecule is losing energy the intensity of each kind of radiation depends principally on the rapidity with which it can be renewed by molecular impacts.

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  • Radiation is a molecular process, and we can speak of the radiation of a molecule but not of its temperature.

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  • We must now inquire a little more closely into the mechanical conception of radiation.

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  • The electrons responsible for the radiation are probably few and not directly involved in the structure of the atom, which according to the view at present in favour, is itself made up of electrons.

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  • But we know also that in the complete radiation of a white body the radiative energy increases with the fourth power of the absolute temperature.

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  • The view that visible radiation must be excited by the impact of such an electron is therefore quite consistent with the view that there is no essential difference between the excitement due to chemical or electrical action and that resulting from a sufficient increase of temperature.

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  • An important experiment by C. Gunther 2 seems however to show that the radiation of metallic salts in a flame has an intensity equal to that belonging to it in virtue of its temperature.

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  • According to independent experiments by Paschen the radiation of the D line sent out by the sodium flame of sufficient density is nearly equal to that of a black body at 'the same temperature.

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  • We might probably with advantage find some definition of what may be called " radiation temperature " based on the relation between radiation and absorption in Kirchhoff's sense, but further information based on experimental investigation is required.

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  • The qualification that the circular function must apply to all time is important, and unless it is recognized as a necessary condition of homogeneity, confusion in the more intricate problems or radiation becomes inevitable.

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  • A limit to homogeneity of radiation is ultimately set by the so-called Doppler effect, which is the change of wave-length due to the translatory motion of the vibrating molecule from or towards the observer.

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  • On the whole it seems probable that the system of moving electrons, which according to a modern theory constitute the atom, is not directly concerned in thermal radiation which would rather be due to a few more loosely connected electrons hanging on to the atom.

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  • Let us now consider the causes which may affect the homogeneity of radiation.

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  • Close to and on either side of the absorptive band ยต 2 has large positive and negative values, and if the above expression remains correct the change of frequency would, close to the centre of absorption, be 2 k-2"+3, which for n =3 and k= Io is 1/2000, or 500 times greater than the observed shifts, but this represents now the maximum displacement and not the displacement of the most intense portion of the radiation.

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  • Young, according to which the dark line observed in the centre of each component of the sodium doublet in a Bunsen burner is transparent to a radiation placed behind.

    0
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  • The same author proved that a sufficient thickness of layer raised the radiation to that of a black body in agreement with Kirchhoff's law.

    0
    1
  • The spectra experimented on by Paschen were band spectra, but as these split up into fine lines the possibility of homogeneous radiation in pure thermal oscillation may be considered as established.

    0
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  • Applying the reasoning to the case of a homogeneous radiation traversing an absorbing medium, we realize that the mutual disturbances of the molecules by collision or otherwise must bring in the free period of the molecule whatever the incident radiation may be.

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  • The fluvio-marine deposits of the Upper Eocene and Oligocene formations contain an interesting mammalian fauna, proving that the African continent formed a centre of radiation for the mammalia in early Tertiary times.

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  • Except a narrow belt on the north along the Mediterranean shore, Egypt lies in an almost rainless area, where the temperature is high by day and sinks quickly at night in consequence of the rapid radiation under the cloudless sky.

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  • The radiation from such a body would be practically nil, no matter how hot the centre was.

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  • The contribution of effective dose from terrestrial gamma radiation and from airborne radon and thoron daughter products depends on the local geology.

    1
    1
  • The level of radiation of the typical mobile phone is around 0.2 to 1 watt per kilogram.

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    1
  • Increased solar activity changes the Earth's solar radiation levels, thereby causing short-term warming cycles.

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  • Nuclear power can give off radiation, at the mining source, during transportation of raw materials, at the reactor itself, and from leaks of improperly contained waste.

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  • The herbs and spices are also radiation and ozone treatment-free.

    1
    1
  • The technology in question was the special coating NASA gives the portholes on its satellites to protect them from radiation found in outer space.

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  • The ATM protein also interacts with other special proteins when DNA is damaged as a result of exposure to some type of radiation.

    1
    1
  • Have you had exposure to chemicals, toxins, or radiation?

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  • The above statements, though correct as far as they go, are an imperfect account of the nature of the radiation from a coupled antenna, but a mathematical treatment is required for a fuller explanation.

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  • Again, the temperature of the air is affected by radiation from the soil; and radiation differs in various soils.

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  • The angle which the earth's axis makes with the plane in which the planet revolves round the sun determines the varying seasonal distribution of solar radiation over the surface and the mathematical zones of climate.

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  • We have not the slightest reason to think that the radiation from the sun is measurably weaker now than it was a couple of thousand years ago, yet it can be shown that, if the sun were merely radiating heat as simply a hot body, then it would cool some degrees every year, and must have cooled many thousands of degrees within the time covered by historical records.

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  • Among his articles may be mentioned those which he wrote for the ninth edition of this Encyclopaedia on Light, Mechanics, Quaternions, Radiation and Thermodynamics, besides the biographical notices of Hamilton and Clerk Maxwell.

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  • Solar radiation warms the tropical more than the polar waters, but, assuming equal salinity, this cause would not account for a difference of level of more than 20 ft.

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  • Edmond Becquerel was associated with his father in much of his work, but he himself paid special attention to the study of light, investigating the photochemical effects and spectroscopic characters of solar radiation and the electric light, and the phenomena of phosphorescence, particularly as displayed by the sulphides and by compounds of uranium.

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  • On the other hand, if the effects arose from balanced stresses set up inside the globe by the radiation, the effects on the vanes and on the case would be of the nature of action and reaction, so that the establishment of motion of the vanes in one direction would involve impulsion of the case in the opposite direction; but when the motion became steady there would no longer be any torque either on the vanes or on the case, and the latter would therefore come back to its previous position of equilibrium; finally, when the light was turned off, the decay of the motion of the vanes would involve impulsion of the case in the direction of their motion until the moment of the restoring torque arising from the suspension of the case had absorbed the angular momentum in the system.

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  • A problem of great importance in connexion with electric wave telegraphy is that of limiting the radiation to certain directions.

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  • He was distinguished as the discoverer of radioactivity, having found in 1896 that uranium at ordinary temperatures emits an invisible radiation which in many respects resembles Rntgen rays, and can affect a photographic plate after passing through thin plates of metal.

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  • If heat passes "of itself" from a higher to a lower temperature by conduction, convection or radiation, the transfer cannot be reversed without an expenditure of work.

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  • We didn't test her for radiation yet, Kelli added.

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  • All these methods warm chiefly by means of convected heat, the amount of true radiation from the pipes being small.

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