To your unspoken question of why he did not go to the hospital, this is fairly common in high risk industries when you are dealing with people with insufficient training (they did not even have a manual they could read). He had worked with the machine long enough that he did not really see it as "dangerous"... think that person who handles prop firearms every day not thinking about how something lodged in the barrel could become an accidental bullet... so since he could not feel any damage he did not consider it to have been "that bad". This is why many of the really risky industries have those graphic, some that cannot even be loaded to YT, videos about what not to do.
I'd imagine the guy who stuck his head in a particle beam did so for the same reason as this guy sticking his hands in - he didn't know it was on, couldn't feel anything right away, and there was little or no warning of activation.
As a cancer survivor (stage 4 tonsillar cancer), I had radiation treatments daily for 3 months and after a month or so from starting treatment, my neck. shoulder and jaw were badly burned but I did recover and have been cancer free for 15 years now. But it did permanently change my hair follicles on my head and face. I do have one question though. What did they do with that chicken the put in the device as an experiment and cooked. Did they eat it for lunch (gives new meaning to KFC's 'Extra Crispy').
if I had to guess, most (or all) of the personnel working at that facility had very highly elevated chances of cancer. How many developed cancer? How many died? Who knows.
There are more bones in the wrist than the ankle 7 bones in your ankle 8 in your wrist yet all you body know standing running jumping, takes less bones than giving a high-five yet your wrist can give you more pain … 1
To your unspoken question of why he did not go to the hospital, this is fairly common in high risk industries when you are dealing with people with insufficient training (they did not even have a manual they could read). He had worked with the machine long enough that he did not really see it as "dangerous"... think that person who handles prop firearms every day not thinking about how something lodged in the barrel could become an accidental bullet... so since he could not feel any damage he did not consider it to have been "that bad".
This is why many of the really risky industries have those graphic, some that cannot even be loaded to YT, videos about what not to do.
I'd imagine the guy who stuck his head in a particle beam did so for the same reason as this guy sticking his hands in - he didn't know it was on, couldn't feel anything right away, and there was little or no warning of activation.
He didn't know, and fell unconscious almost instantly.
Don't f*** with physics, you always loose.
Yeah, physics f***ks back harder, and without hesitation.
As a cancer survivor (stage 4 tonsillar cancer), I had radiation treatments daily for 3 months and after a month or so from starting treatment, my neck. shoulder and jaw were badly burned but I did recover and have been cancer free for 15 years now. But it did permanently change my hair follicles on my head and face. I do have one question though. What did they do with that chicken the put in the device as an experiment and cooked. Did they eat it for lunch (gives new meaning to KFC's 'Extra Crispy').
if I had to guess, most (or all) of the personnel working at that facility had very highly elevated chances of cancer. How many developed cancer? How many died? Who knows.
There are more bones in the wrist than the ankle 7 bones in your ankle 8 in your wrist yet all you body know standing running jumping, takes less bones than giving a high-five yet your wrist can give you more pain … 1