Auteur Sujet: rfpl An Experimental Cargo Ship Launched For the ISS Today  (Lu 3 fois)

MethrenRaf

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rfpl An Experimental Cargo Ship Launched For the ISS Today
« le: Janvier 02, 2025, 01:12:41 pm »
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 CBS News HealthWatch Correspondent, Emily Senay  reports that radiation therapy can cause debilitating side effects when healthy tissue is damaged along with cancer cell stanley canada s. But, the latest in computer imaging and new technology allows doctors to focus the powerful rays more accurately.  It destroys tumors without hurting the patient.Bob Alexander, a prostate cancer patient, who received more than twenty doses of radiation, is feeling pretty good now.   The radiation was no problem at all, so far. It was really nothing. Like a walk in the park. Bob is able to avoid extreme fatigue and other side effects caused by standard radiation therapy.  Thank stanley cup s to advances in technology, that allow doctors to focus the radiation beam on his cancer, without damaging healthy surrounding tissue.Computers are used to map the tumor and provide a blueprint for precision treatment.Dr. Steven Leibel of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center explains the image on his computer to Dr. Senay  :  You see the high dose of radiation around the prostate in white.  You can see how the high dose of radiation is shaped around the normal tissue structures. The surrounding tissue gets much lower doses of radiation, which decreases the side effects of treatment.          Doctors at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, are using a similar approach to target hard-to-reach tumors.   We do minimize the  stanley cup dose to the normal tissues and maximize the dose to the tumor.  said Francis Newman of the University Aefk Superstition Might Be Practical In Some Circumstances
 https://youtube/watch v=1sGqQek3pqQ     Low earth orbit is becoming increasingly crowded with satellite traffic and, as Gravity showed us, increasingly treacherous. So rather than try to squeeze yet another spacecraft into the mix, a French consortium has begun development on a super-high altitude, autonomous dirigible that will skim along the edge of the stratosphere. The Stratobus, which is still in its early concept stages, is being developed by a team from Thales Alenia, Airbus, Zodiac Marine, and CEA-Liten, is designed to perform a variety of roles鈥攆rom border monitoring and surveillance to communication and navigation signal relaying鈥攁t the stratosp cups stanley heric height of 13 miles. The prototype, which the team expects to be operational within five years, will be 300 feet long and 75 stanley taza  feet wide with a carbon fiber envelope supported by a semi-rigid frame. A pair of thrust vectoring electric fans won ;t so much provide propulsion as counter the stratosphere   strong winds, keeping the dirigible loc stanley thermos ked in a fixed position over the Earth. Its rotating solar panel array should generate enough power to hoist payloads of up to 450 pounds. And since the StratoBus will operate autonomously, it will be able to stay aloft for up to a year at a time. Its overall service life expectancy, however, is a startlingly brief five years, barely half of the 10-15 year endurance of the average geostationary communications satellite currently in orbit. There   no word yet on how much