نتایج جستجو برای: bomb

تعداد نتایج: 3654  

2006
Young-Su Ju Hyung-Joon Jhun Jung-Bum Kim Jin-Kook Kim

Many Koreans, in addition to Japanese, were killed or injured by the atomic bombs detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945. Our study examined noncancer diseases of Korean A-bomb survivors in residence at Hapcheon, Republic of Korea and evaluated whether they had significantly higher prevalence of noncancer diseases than non-exposed people. We evaluated a number of tests, including...

Journal: :Singapore medical journal 2009
S H Goh

Bomb blast injuries are no longer confined to battlefields. With the ever present threat of terrorism, we should always be prepared for bomb blasts. Bomb blast injuries tend to affect air-containing organs more, as the blast wave tends to exert a shearing force on air-tissue interfaces. Commonly-injured organs include the tympanic membranes, the sinuses, the lungs and the bowel. Of these, blast...

2018
Kotaro Ozasa Eric J Grant Kazunori Kodama

Cohorts of atomic bomb survivors-including those exposed in utero-and children conceived after parental exposure were established to investigate late health effects of atomic bomb radiation and its transgenerational effects by the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (ABCC) in the 1950s. ABCC was reorganized to the Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF) in 1975, and all work has been continued...

Journal: :Radiation research 1999
D J Brenner

Whether fractionation decreases the risk of breast cancer induced by low-LET radiation is a question of some importance. Analyses of the data for TB cohorts who were exposed to multiple fluoroscopies show an apparently similar breast cancer risk compared with those for the acutely exposed A-bomb survivors. However, the fluoroscopy cohorts were subjected to very much lower-energy photons (60-80 ...

Journal: :Cancer research 1946
S WARREN

The distinctive feature of the atomic bomb is the large amount of radiant energy that it produces. While this energy covers a wide range of the electromagnetic spectrum, its chief physiologic and pathologic effects may be divided into two groups: first, the effects of heat, producing primary thermal injury of the flash burn type, and secondary thermal injuries due to induced fires; second, the ...

Journal: :Radiation research 2010
Yoichiro Kusunoki Mika Yamaoka Yoshiko Kubo Tomonori Hayashi Fumiyoshi Kasagi Evan B Douple Kei Nakachi

In this paper we summarize the long-term effects of A-bomb radiation on the T-cell system and discuss the possible involvement of attenuated T-cell immunity in the disease development observed in A-bomb survivors. Our previous observations on such effects include impaired mitogen-dependent proliferation and IL-2 production, decreases in naive T-cell populations, and increased proportions of ane...

Journal: :The Lancet 1918

Journal: :Chemical & Engineering News Archive 1954

Journal: :Radiation research 2010
A Wallner W Rühm G Rugel N Nakamura A Arazi T Faestermann K Knie H J Maier G Korschinek

The detection of (41)Ca atoms in tooth enamel using accelerator mass spectrometry is suggested as a method capable of reconstructing thermal neutron exposures from atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In general, (41)Ca atoms are produced via thermal neutron capture by stable (40)Ca. Thus any (41)Ca atoms present in the tooth enamel of the survivors would be due to neutron exposure ...

Journal: :Physics in Perspective 2022

Abstract Why did German physicists not build an atomic bomb during the Second World War? This question has long been controversial. essay provides a new perspective through focus on everyday practice of in their laboratories. The study research work obscured by bomb. To this end, Viennese group Uranverein , or “Uranium Club,” will be analyzed detail. What breaks and continuities were there labo...

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