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  2. Ionizing radiation | Definition, Sources, Types, Effects, & Facts...

    www.britannica.com/science/ionizing-radiation

    Ionizing radiation, flow of energy in the form of atomic and subatomic particles or electromagnetic waves that is capable of freeing electrons from an atom, causing the atom to become charged (or ionized).

  3. Ionizing radiation and health effects - World Health Organization...

    www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/ionizing-radiation-and-health-effects

    Ionizing radiation is a type of energy released by atoms in the form of electromagnetic waves or particles. People are exposed to natural sources of ionizing radiation, such as in soil, water, and vegetation, as well as in human-made sources, such as x-rays in medical devices.

  4. Ionizing radiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionizing_radiation

    Ionizing radiation (US, ionising radiation in the UK), including nuclear radiation, consists of subatomic particles or electromagnetic waves that have sufficient energy to ionize atoms or molecules by detaching electrons from them. [1]

  5. Difference Between Ionizing and Non-Ionizing Radiation

    sciencenotes.org/difference-between-ionizing-and-non-ionizing-radiation

    Ionizing radiation includes subatomic particles and the high energy, short-wavelength portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Non-ionizing radiation include the visible spectrum and the low energy, long-wavelength part of the spectrum beyond visible light.

  6. About Ionizing Radiation | Radiation and Your Health | CDC

    www.cdc.gov/radiation-health/about/ionizing-radiation.html

    Ionizing radiation is a powerful form of energy with medical applications such as diagnostic testing. At high enough doses, it can alter your body's cells and DNA. Unlike some non-ionizing radiation, it can cause serious harm or cancer with enough exposure. Radiation exists all around us and is in two forms: ionizing and non-ionizing radiation.

  7. Radiation: Ionizing radiation - World Health Organization (WHO)

    www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/radiation-ionizing-radiation

    Ionizing radiation is radiation with enough energy that to remove tightly bound electrons from the orbit of an atom, causing that atom to become charged or ionized. Here we are concerned with only one type of radiation, ionizing radiation, which occurs in two forms: waves or particles.

  8. Ionizing radiation gives off energy by knocking electrons off atoms, which causes the atoms to have a charge. Another term for a charged particle is an ion. The charges on the atomic particles make ionizing radiation unstable and reactive.

  9. Ionizing radiation has so much energy it can knock electrons out of atoms, a process known as ionization. Ionizing radiation can affect the atoms in living things, so it poses a health risk by damaging tissue and DNA in genes. Ionizing radiation comes from x-ray machines, cosmic particles from outer space and radioactive elements. Radioactive ...

  10. Ionizing Radiation - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK534237

    Ionizing radiation uses gamma, x, alpha particles, neutrons, beta rays, charged nuclei, and positron radiation. Life on Earth has thrived for approximately 4 billion years amid the constant presence of natural ionizing radiation.

  11. What Is Ionizing Radiation? | NRC.gov

    www.nrc.gov/.../basic-ref/students/science-101/what-is-ionizing-radiation.html

    Ionizing radiation is radiation with enough energy to create ion pairs in atoms. It is ionizing radiation that is of particular interest to the NRC because of its potential to cause health effects. To help you visualize this, think again about Bohr's model.