Examples of percent ionization in the following topics:
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- Up to 10 percent of invasive cancers are related to radiation exposure, including both ionizing radiation and non-ionizing radiation.
- Up to 10 percent of invasive cancers are related to radiation exposure, including both ionizing radiation and non-ionizing radiation.
- Additionally, the vast majority of non-invasive cancers are non-melanoma skin cancers caused by non-ionizing ultraviolet radiation.
- Exposure to ionizing radiation is known to increase the future incidence of cancer, particularly leukemia.
- The most widely accepted model posits that the incidence of cancer due to ionizing radiation increases linearly with effective radiation dose at a rate of 5.5 percent per sievert.
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- Ionizing radiation from fallout can cause genetic effects, birth defects, cancer, cataracts, and other organ and tissue defects.
- Initial stage: the first 1–9 weeks; the period with the greatest number of deaths—90 percent due to thermal injury and/or blast effects and 10 percent due to super-lethal radiation exposure.
- Intermediate stage: from 10–12 weeks; deaths in this period are from ionizing radiation in the median lethal range.
- Ionizing radiation from fallout can cause genetic effects, birth defects, cancer, cataracts, and other organ and tissue defects.
- By directly or indirectly ionizing, radiation can affect a cell's ability to conduct repair and reproduction.
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- First, the sample is ionized.
- There are a wide variety of techniques for ionizing and detecting compounds.
- The ion source is the part of the mass spectrometer that ionizes the compound.
- Chloride atoms and ions come in two isotopes, with masses of approximately 35 amu (at a natural abundance of about 75 percent) and approximately 37 amu (at a natural abundance of about 25 percent).
- The components of the sample are ionized by one of a variety of methods, such as the ionizing filament.
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- This property is also referred to as the ionization potentia and is measured in volts.
- Large atoms or molecules have low ionization energy, while small molecules tend to have higher ionization energies.
- The ionization energy may be an indicator of the reactivity of an element.
- Based on these two principles, the easiest element to ionize is francium and the hardest to ionize is helium.
- This video explains the periodic trends in ionization energy....periodicity.
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- For example, the most abundant isotope of carbon, C-12, is invisible to NMR, whereas the minor isotope C-13 is NMR active, but only comprises 1.1 percent of a given sample of carbon.
- Mass spectrometry is a technique for determining the molecular weight of an ionized molecule and fragments of the molecule that appear when the molecule is ionized.
- The addition of an isotope will change the observed mass of the parent ion—the molecule that is ionized and does not fragment.
- The radioactive decay can be detected through an ionization chamber or autoradiographs of gels.
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- Ninety-nine percent or more is deposited in bone and the remainder plays a vital role in nerve conduction, muscle contraction, hormone release and cell signalling.
- Calcium in plasma exists in three forms: ionized, nonionized and protein bound.
- It is the ionized calcium concentration that is monitored by the parathyroid gland and if low, parathyroid hormone secretion is increased.
- This increases ionized calcium levels by increasing bone re-absorption, decreasing renal excretion and acting on the kidney to increase the rate of formation of active Vitamin D, thereby increasing gut absorption of calcium.
- Plasma phosphate has no direct effect on parathyroid hormone secretion; however, if it is elevated it combines with Ca++, decreasing ionized Ca++ in plasma, and thereby increasing parathyroid hormone secretion.
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- Millikan then exposed the droplets to X-rays, which ionized molecules in the air and caused electrons to attach to the oil droplets, thus making them charged.
- Although the charge of each droplet was unknown, Millikan adjusted the strength of the X-rays ionizing the air and measured many values of (q) from many different oil droplets.
- The calculated value from the Oil-Drop Experiment differs by less than one percent of the current accepted value of 1.602176487(40)×10−19 C.
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- Ionizing radiation could be a lethal health hazard if used inappropriately.
- High-energy X-rays are a form of ionizing energy allowing to irradiate large packages and pallet loads of medical devices.
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- On average, only about 1 percent of a weak acid solution dissociates in water in a 0.1 mol/L solution.
- Weak acids ionize in a water solution only to a very moderate extent.
- The strength of a weak acid is represented as either an equilibrium constant or a percent dissociation.
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- Radiation dosimetry is the measurement and calculation of the absorbed dose from exposure to indirect and direct ionizing radiation.
- Radiation dosimetry is the measurement and calculation of the absorbed dose in matter and tissue resulting from exposure to indirect and direct ionizing radiation.
- It is a scientific subspecialty in the fields of health physics and medical physics that is focused on the calculation of internal and external doses from ionizing radiation.
- There are several ways of measuring doses from ionizing radiation, including personal dosimeters and ionization chambers.