Under the stern gaze of 24 Nobel laureates and engineers of contemporary history, Tobias Chemnitz took the 80 spectators in the Hall of Honor of the Deutsches Museum and via livestream on his medical-physical excursion. As promised in the announcement, the instrument scientist from the Technical University of Munich showed “The Many Faces of the Neutron in Medicine” at the FRM II.
As one example, he explained how Lutetium-177, which is produced at the research neutron source, is used to treat prostate tumors. As another example, he showed what Molybdenum-99 is needed for, which will be produced at the Garching neutron source in the future. The audience learned how Molybdenum-99 decays to Technetium-99m and why it plays the main role in nuclear medicine as a diagnostic agent for cardiac function and metastases.