Radiation Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Radiation stocks.

Radiation Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 4 HCA Compelling Reasons to Hold on to Encompass Health Stock Right Now
Oct 4 HCA Looking for Stocks with Positive Earnings Momentum? Check Out These 2 Medical Names
Oct 4 RELL Reflecting On Specialty Equipment Distributors Stocks’ Q2 Earnings: Richardson Electronics (NASDAQ:RELL)
Oct 3 MOD Modine (MOD) Registers a Bigger Fall Than the Market: Important Facts to Note
Oct 3 PHG Philips Issues Software Fix For Some Ventilators To Fix Power Alarms Issues, Oxygen Display Errors
Oct 3 HCA Ensign Expands Presence in Nebraska With Two Acquisitions
Oct 3 HCA Brookdale Bets Big With $610M Acquisitions Amid Debt Refinancing
Oct 3 HCA Why This 1 Momentum Stock Could Be a Great Addition to Your Portfolio
Oct 3 PHG PetIQ, Inc. (PETQ) Hits Fresh High: Is There Still Room to Run?
Oct 3 PHG Independent lab fires back after Philips sues over testing results
Oct 3 ICAD iCAD Highlights Global Availability of ProFound Cloud and International Expansion Milestones at JFR 2024
Oct 3 PHG Pioneering hospitals take major steps towards decarbonizing healthcare with Philips
Oct 3 PHG A $1 billion CPAP recall devastated Philips. The CEO’s turnaround plan involves overhauling company culture and adding a key role to the C-suite
Oct 2 RELL Richardson Electronics Announces Date of First Quarter Fiscal Year 2025 Conference Call
Oct 2 PHG Philips hit with another Class I recall amid ventilator software failures
Oct 2 HCA Can Tenet Healthcare's $910M Divestment in Alabama Cure its Debt Woes?
Oct 2 PHG Philips Avent Enters the Smart Parenting Category with the launch of its most advanced baby monitor: the Premium Connected Baby Monitor
Oct 2 PHG Philips issues fix for ventilator problems linked to 9 injuries, 1 death
Oct 2 PHG Are the Twists and Turns Needed to Ditch Synthetics Self-Inflicted?
Oct 2 HCA HCA’s Mission Hospital in North Carolina still without running water days after Hurricane Helene hits
Radiation

In physics, radiation is the emission or transmission of energy in the form of waves or particles through space or through a material medium. This includes:

electromagnetic radiation, such as radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, x-rays, and gamma radiation (γ)
particle radiation, such as alpha radiation (α), beta radiation (β), and neutron radiation (particles of non-zero rest energy)
acoustic radiation, such as ultrasound, sound, and seismic waves (dependent on a physical transmission medium)
gravitational radiation, radiation that takes the form of gravitational waves, or ripples in the curvature of spacetime.Radiation is often categorized as either ionizing or non-ionizing depending on the energy of the radiated particles. Ionizing radiation carries more than 10 eV, which is enough to ionize atoms and molecules, and break chemical bonds. This is an important distinction due to the large difference in harmfulness to living organisms. A common source of ionizing radiation is radioactive materials that emit α, β, or γ radiation, consisting of helium nuclei, electrons or positrons, and photons, respectively. Other sources include X-rays from medical radiography examinations and muons, mesons, positrons, neutrons and other particles that constitute the secondary cosmic rays that are produced after primary cosmic rays interact with Earth's atmosphere.
Gamma rays, X-rays and the higher energy range of ultraviolet light constitute the ionizing part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The word "ionize" refers to the breaking of one or more electrons away from an atom, an action that requires the relatively high energies that these electromagnetic waves supply. Further down the spectrum, the non-ionizing lower energies of the lower ultraviolet spectrum cannot ionize atoms, but can disrupt the inter-atomic bonds which form molecules, thereby breaking down molecules rather than atoms; a good example of this is sunburn caused by long-wavelength solar ultraviolet. The waves of longer wavelength than UV in visible light, infrared and microwave frequencies cannot break bonds but can cause vibrations in the bonds which are sensed as heat. Radio wavelengths and below generally are not regarded as harmful to biological systems. These are not sharp delineations of the energies; there is some overlap in the effects of specific frequencies.The word radiation arises from the phenomenon of waves radiating (i.e., traveling outward in all directions) from a source. This aspect leads to a system of measurements and physical units that are applicable to all types of radiation. Because such radiation expands as it passes through space, and as its energy is conserved (in vacuum), the intensity of all types of radiation from a point source follows an inverse-square law in relation to the distance from its source. Like any ideal law, the inverse-square law approximates a measured radiation intensity to the extent that the source approximates a geometric point.

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