Medical X-rays taken in space for the first time

Representative preflight, in-flight, and postflight hand radiographs. Radiographs of the hand were acquired (A) preflight by a crewmember, (B) in-flight on day 1 after launch (L+1) by a crewmember, and (C) postflight by a non-crew operator using the same imaging protocol. (RSNA via SWNS)

By Stephen Beech

Medical X-rays have been taken in space for the first time — making long-term flights deep into the solar system a safer option.

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(Photo by Kai Pilger via Pexels)

Medical X-rays taken in space for the first time

Representative preflight, in-flight, and postflight chest radiographs. Radiographs of the chest were acquired (A) preflight by a crewmember, (B, C) in-flight on day 3 after launch (L+3) by a crewmember, and (D) postflight by a non-crew operator using the same imaging protocol. (RSNA via SWNS)

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(Photo by SpaceX via Pexels)

Originally published on talker.news, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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