YES,gamma rays will kill you.
For most nuclear imaging studies, radionuclide is injected into the patient and the images are taken with a gamma camera suspended above the patient who will be lying on a table. The camera detects the gamma rays emitted from the radionuclide in the patient's body and uses this information to produce an image that shows the distribution of the radionuclide within the body. The image is recorded on film and is called a radionuclide scan.
When conducting a thyroid scan, the patient needs to be given a dose of radioactive iodine by either swallowing or intravenously. During the scan, a gamma scintillation camera takes pictures of the thyroid gland from 3 different angles. The camera detects gamma ray emissions from the decay of the radioactive iodine. Thus the technology of the camera and the computer that generates the image of the thyroid gland are technologies used in conjunction with I-131
gamma cup is a part of Marchantia on its thallus which has gamma
The answer is gamma rays.
Gamma-rays
It depends on the type of scan but by far the most common scan uses "gamma" rays to get a picture. The radionuclide used is Tc99m which gives off gamma rays at 140 kEV, a very suitable energy level for the cameras used in nuclear medicine.
YES,gamma rays will kill you.
you take a pic of it or just scan it and hit scan
The isotope is injected into a vein and absorbed by healthy tissue at a known rate during a certain time period. The radionuclide detector, in this case a gamma scintillation camera, picks up the gamma rays emitted by the isotope.
For most nuclear imaging studies, radionuclide is injected into the patient and the images are taken with a gamma camera suspended above the patient who will be lying on a table. The camera detects the gamma rays emitted from the radionuclide in the patient's body and uses this information to produce an image that shows the distribution of the radionuclide within the body. The image is recorded on film and is called a radionuclide scan.
Water and benzene will have a work of adhesion rather than a work of cohesion as this is the work associated with the connection between two things as opposed to cohesion which is the force holding one thing together. The expression for the work of adhesion is: gamma of the liquid vapour interface + gamma of solid vapour interface - gamma of solid liquid interface. Where gamma is surface tension.
The pictures are taken via gamma camera driven by a computer program
they use gamma rays... i think. top that peeps!
by shocs and mega-gamma rays. drillers can also do the work.
Any OBD II scan tool should work.
No.