This X-ray energy is generated from the conversion of 0.4% of the pulsar's spin-down power.
The vast X-ray energies suddenly dumped in their little laps will kill them in a few seconds, giving the fastest cures on record.
The X-ray energy would create an extremely powerful laser burst that would travel down the rods and out in all directions.
This quantity is proportional to the total X-ray energy produced by a given X-ray tube operated at a particular voltage.
The photo-absorption strongly depends on the atomic number of the material and the X-ray energy.
Gamma rays are generally the most energetic of these, although broad overlap with X-ray energies occurs.
This makes the signal very strong, but causes a dead time after each event and makes it impossible to measure the X-ray energies.
The cumulative reflection is not only coherent but can amount to as much as 60 percent of the X-ray energy that hits the mirror.
In sweeping the sky, the telescope observed enormous regions of intense X-ray energy associated with quasars.
Some examples of X-ray energies used in medicine are: