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background radiation

NOUN
  1. radiation coming from sources other than those being observed

How To Use background radiation In A Sentence

  • Humanity was almost extinguished, their spirits becoming part of the background radiation that blanketed the earth.
  • The 20 tonnes of lead in the batteries has been found to have an immeasurably low level of background radiation.
  • Though machines vary, the average set of bitewing X-rays adds only as much radiation as you'd get from about three extra weeks of natural background radiation.
  • Mora-Corrasco, 1998) After final analysis, it was determined that the maximum dose of radiation received by a research subject was 330 mrem, which is 3 times higher than the recommended dose for background radiation in one year (United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 2008). Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • It is important too, for use in high-luminosity linear electron - positron colliders where the focus is extremely tight, to know whether or not detectors can separate collision results from background radiation.
  • If there is no safe dose cancer rates should increase as the natural background radiation level increases.
  • Data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) can show the minute temperature changes created as the cosmic microwave background radiation moves through gases in galaxy clusters.
  • It was an American voice asking me: what do you think of the discovery of fluctuations in the microwave background radiation? Times, Sunday Times
  • The phenomenon was dubbed the "cosmic microwave background radiation. The Origin of the Universe
  • The influx of energy would help explain the microwave background radiation.
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