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| Photo Credit: Courtesy of University of York |
Energy that would normally go to waste inside powerful particle accelerators could be used to create valuable medical isotopes, scientists have found.
The next step is to explore how the method could be scaled up to deliver clinically use
Researchers at the University of York have shown that intense radiation captured in particle accelerator “beam dumps” could be repurposed to produce materials used in cancer therapy.
Scientists have now found a way to make those leftover photons do a second job, without affecting the main physics experiments.
A beam of photons designed to investigate things like the matter that makes up our universe, could at the same time, be used to create useful medical isotopes in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.




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