Mercury Magma can be used in hospitals that perform advanced oncology and surgical treatments. It is suitable for medical centers equipped for HIPEC (Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy) and CRS (Cyto-Reductive Surgery) procedures. Specialized cancer hospitals, oncology departments, multispecialty hospitals, and tertiary care surgical units can effectively use this device.
It is also beneficial for operation theaters handling complex abdominal cancer surgeries where controlled chemotherapy fluid heating is required.
schools, libraries, and hospitals are all institutional land uses.
What type of freon does a 1993 cougar use
Yes, most hospitals use radiation oncology locums. This type of technology is getting more common and popular as the price goes down.
It is a gas discharge lamp which uses mercury in excited states.
R134a
5W-30
they used to use mercury but now they use a type of alcohal
5W30 full synthetic.
R-134a
Hospitals use short-haul applications
Sure, why not? They can even use veterinarian hospitals, field hospitals, emergency response hospitals, or have a friend try to repair their problem. Those who are veterans certainly can, and do. I am not sure if these hospitals allow non-veterans to use them or not.
You can use any standard antifreeze, there is no special type required.