Cancer treatment, industrial imaging, sterilization of food & surgical instruments are just a few of the myriad of applications for gamma rays. remember, gamma rays are produced primarily during the decay of certain radioisotopes and although not unlike x-rays, are not produced in the same fashion. Cobalt 60 has been used to provide a gamma source for radio-graphic imaging in nondestructive testing of pipe welds.
We use Gamma Ray to make Hulk
Americium 241 is an artificial isotope with a long half life - 432,2 years - and a gamma ray emitter. Being a strong gamma emitter it can be used for gamma radiography of materials and for thickness gauges.
A picture of the Sun with rays or draw the Earth with gamma rays coming towards it
Gamma rays are used to kill cancer cells.
Yes
We use a gamma ray machine to find out where the gamma rays are and where they are pointed to. We also use these machines to study a gamma ray.
We use Gamma Ray to make Hulk
The typical use for human-generated gamma radiation is in medical procedures, such as the "gamma knife" cancer therapy treatments.
No they do not, or use gamma ray telescopes either. Not ground based.
It comes out of the machine they use to blast away cancer tumors.
Gamma Rays can pass straight through human tissue and are therefore highly dangerous. The only time you are likely to use Gamma rays is in scientific research.
they use gamma rays... i think. top that peeps!
they use radio telescopes, infrared, gamma ray, and etc.
It can be used in radiation therapy to treat cancer as the high-energy gamma rays can kill tumour cells. Source: I am a Nuclear Physicist working in MIT
Electromagnetic radiation emitted during radioactive decay and having an extremely short wavelength.
Those radiations hardly reach Earth's surface, because they are absorbed by the atmosphere.
Americium 241 is an artificial isotope with a long half life - 432,2 years - and a gamma ray emitter. Being a strong gamma emitter it can be used for gamma radiography of materials and for thickness gauges.