Scientists have created a perovskite-based gamma-ray detector that surpasses traditional nuclear medicine imaging technology. The device delivers sharper, faster, and safer scans at a fraction of the ...
Professor of Nuclear Medicine at Padjadjaran University said it takes 30 years for half of the Cesium-137 to disappear from ...
High energy scans or the body looking for tumors or infections could be greatly improved by adopting perovskite detectors instead of the fragile or low-resolution options currently in use, a new study ...
The collision of two neutron stars creates a cosmic explosion so powerful it forges gold, unleashes gravitational waves, and ...
University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor Zachary Morris discusses his research into the field of theranostics and the “team ...
Longevity researcher Dr. Eric Verdin says we don’t need to wait for an anti-aging pill. We already know how to live longer ...
How exactly can food become exposed to radioactive contamination, and what are the resulting health implications? Find the ...
When Paul Tafforeau saw his first experimental scans of a COVID-19 victim’s lung, he thought he had failed. A paleontologist by training, Tafforeau had been laboring with a team strewn across Europe ...
The radiation you receive from airport body scanners is less than what you get on the flight. It's safe for everyone to use, ...
Few things in life are as terrifying as an Iron Fist player on a collision course for your Marvel Rivals character. The ...
Remarkably, even though radioactivity is a threat to life, scientists can control and use it to diagnose and treat diseases – including cancers. If the radiation is delivered precisely to where cancer ...
While imaging procedures in nuclear medicine require radionuclides that will emit γ (gamma) radiation able to penetrate the body, a different class of radionuclides possessing optimal relative ...