Cryonics: Difference between revisions

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'''Cryonics''' is the [[cryopreservation]] of [[corpse]]s until [[resuscitation]] may eventually become possible in the future. There is no [[scientific method|scientific]] evidence to support such hopes for [[human]] bodies preserved with currently available technology, although some [[extremophile]] microbes and invertebrates can survive storage in [[liquid nitrogen]].  
'''Cryonics''' is the [[cryopreservation]] of [[corpse]]s in the belief that [[resuscitation]] may eventually become possible in the future. There is no [[scientific method|scientific]] evidence to support such hopes for [[human]] bodies preserved with currently available technology, although some [[extremophile]] microbes and invertebrates can survive storage in [[liquid nitrogen]].  


The term is often confused with [[cryogenics]], the field concerned with producing temperatures at or below the [[boiling point]]s of [[permanent gas]]es (i.e. below about 90 [[Kelvin (unit)|K]]). Both derive from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word κρύος (kryos), meaning cold.
The term is often confused with [[cryogenics]], the field concerned with producing temperatures at or below the [[boiling point]]s of [[permanent gas]]es (i.e. below about 90 [[Kelvin (unit)|K]]). Both derive from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word κρύος (kryos), meaning cold.

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Cryonics is the cryopreservation of corpses in the belief that resuscitation may eventually become possible in the future. There is no scientific evidence to support such hopes for human bodies preserved with currently available technology, although some extremophile microbes and invertebrates can survive storage in liquid nitrogen.

The term is often confused with cryogenics, the field concerned with producing temperatures at or below the boiling points of permanent gases (i.e. below about 90 K). Both derive from the Greek word κρύος (kryos), meaning cold.