Xenon Radioactive

Radioactive xenon is a group of isotopes that have a mass number from 121 to 144. They are radioactive and have a half-life ranging from a fraction of a second (Xe-127) to 36.4 days (Xe-131).

Radioactive xenon is used in radioisotope diagnostics. It can be used in the form of gas mixtures or saline solutions to detect various diseases such as lung, breast and prostate cancer.

In addition, radioactive xenon can be used in medicine to treat cancer. It can help reduce tumor size and improve patients' quality of life.

However, the use of radioactive xenon is associated with some risks. For example, it can cause radiation exposure, which can lead to various diseases such as cancer. Therefore, precautions must be taken when working with this substance.



Radioactive xenon is a group of radioactive isotopes with a mass number from 131 to 2.48 with a half-life of up to two hours. Gas ion xenon is used as a radiopaque agent in the study of the intestines and for the diagnosis of a number of gastrointestinal and kidney diseases, bone diseases, and some neurological and oncological diseases. The half-life can be long - up to twenty days. It is the heaviest gas with an atomic number of 54. The nuclear mass is 53.943 amu. Xenon could be used in early vacuum pumping tubes because they emitted a small X-ray beam for a short time, very similar in properties to cyclotron radiation. The previously created helium-neon laser was used in medicine exclusively as a source of radiation with a wavelength of 0.6328 microns. Xenon-argon (silver) laser has become