
Cryonics - Wikipedia
Cryonics (from Greek: κρύος kryos, meaning "cold") is the low-temperature freezing (usually at −196 °C or −320.8 °F or 77.1 K) and storage of human remains in the hope that resurrection …
Cryonics | Description, Process, Popularization, & Facts | Britannica
Cryonics is the practice of freezing an individual who has died, with the object of reviving the individual sometime in the future. The process is initiated shortly after death, the body being …
Intro to Cryonics - Alcor Life Extension Foundation
Discover how cryonics works, the principles behind it, and what the future may hold for long-term biological preservation. Although it may seem like science fiction, cryonics is grounded in …
Cryonics Institute Home - The Cryonics Institute
The Cryonics Institute provides cryonics services for whole-body human and pet cryopreservation, DNA and tissue storage and more.
Cryonics | Research Starters - EBSCO
Cryonics is a theoretical life support technology focused on the preservation of individuals who are terminally ill by freezing them at extremely low temperatures, specifically at -196 degrees …
Cryonics FAQ - Cryonics Society | Supporting Biostasis Research …
Cryonics is the practice of preserving the bodies of individuals whose lives can no longer be sustained by contemporary medicine by cooling their bodies to cryogenic temperatures to halt …
What Is Cryonics? - How Cryonics Works | HowStuffWorks
In an operating room at Alcor Life Extension Foundation, a cryonics patient is cooled in a vat of dry ice as part of the "freezing" procedure. Cryonics is the practice of preserving human …
Cryonics is the preservation of human remains at very low temperatures with the goal of stopping the biological process and maybe reviving people in the future when medical technology has …
Introduction to Cryonics - Cryonics Archive
Cryonics is an effort to save lives by using temperatures so cold that a person beyond help by today’s medicine can be preserved for decades or centuries until a future medical technology …
FAQ - The Cryonics Institute
Cryonics simply — but reasonably — claims that if you cryopreserve a person in a way that limits damage, then that person’s brain structure may be preserved sufficiently to make the eventual …