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1.
Radiat Res ; 120(1): 36-71, 1989 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2798782

ABSTRACT

We present the final analysis of an experiment to study the interaction of a beam of 670A MeV neon ions incident on a water column set to different thicknesses. The atomic number Z (and, in some cases, the isotopic mass A) of primary beam particles and of the products of nuclear interactions emerging from the water column close to the central axis of the beam was obtained for nuclei between Be (Z = 4) and Ne (Z = 10) using a time-of-flight telescope to measure the velocity and a set of silicon detectors to measure the energy loss of each particle. The fluence of particles of a given charge was obtained and normalized to the incident beam intensity. Corrections were made for accidental coincidences between multiple particles triggering the TOF telescope and for interactions in the detector. The background due to beam particles interacting in beam line elements upstream of the detector was calculated. Sources of experimental artifacts and background in particle identification experiments designed to characterize heavy ion beams for radiobiological research are summarized, and some of the difficulties inherent in this work are discussed. Complete tables of absolutely normalized fluence spectra as a function of LET are included for reference purposes.


Subject(s)
Neon , Ions , Particle Accelerators , Water
2.
Radiat Res ; 116(2): 183-95, 1988 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3186931

ABSTRACT

Single-event energy distributions were measured in a 1.3-micron-diameter site as a function of radial distance from the trajectory of high-energy iron ions having an energy of about 600 MeV/amu. It was found that beyond distances of a few micrometers the average lineal energy of the (mostly single) secondary electrons (delta rays) is of the order of 3 keV/micron. This is similar to the value found in a medium irradiated by 170-keV photons. The frequency-mean specific energy for delta rays occurring at large distances from the path of the primary ion exceeds the calculated (radial) absorbed dose by two orders of magnitude.


Subject(s)
Radiometry/methods , Ions , Iron , Radiometry/instrumentation , Relative Biological Effectiveness
3.
Radiat Res ; 112(3): 436-48, 1987 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3423211

ABSTRACT

Linear energy transfer (LET infinity) spectra of identified charge fragments and primaries, produced by nuclear interactions of 670 MeV/A neon in water, were measured along the unmodulated Bragg curve of the neon beam. The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) values for spermatogonial cell killing, as reported on the basis of weight loss assay of mouse testes irradiated with beams of approximately constant single LET infinity, were summed over the particle LET infinity spectra to obtain an effective RBE for each charged-particle species, as a function of water absorber thickness. The resultant values of effective RBE were combined to obtain an effective RBE for the mixed radiation field. The RBE calculated in this way was compared with experimental RBEs obtained for spermatogonial cell killing in the mixed radiation field produced by neon ions traversing a thick water absorber. Discrepancies of 10-40% were observed between the calculated RBE and the RBE measured in the mixed radiation field. Part of this discrepancy can be attributed to undetected low-Z fragments, whose contribution is not included in the calculation, leading to an overestimated value for the calculated RBE. On the other hand, calculated values 10% greater than the measured RBE are explained as track structure effects due to the higher radial ionization density near neon tracks relative to the ionization density near the silicon tracks used to fit the RBE vs LET infinity data.


Subject(s)
Neon , Particle Accelerators , Water , Animals , Cell Survival/radiation effects , Energy Transfer , Ions , Male , Mice , Relative Biological Effectiveness , Spermatogonia/radiation effects , Testis/radiation effects
4.
Med Phys ; 13(2): 217-28, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3010066

ABSTRACT

We describe calculations of the energy loss, range, stopping power, multiple scattering, and other related properties of a high-energy heavy-ion beam at any one of a set of beam line elements. A beam line element (e.g., any beam modification, detection, or control device) is characterized by its thickness, areal density, aperture, and function. The loss of multiply scattered particles to any finite-aperture detector is calculated in the small-angle approximation, and the position of the Bragg peak, as given by particles stopping in the second of two ionization chambers used for Bragg curve measurements, is estimated. A general purpose computer program, PROPAGATE, has been written to allow addition, deletion, and modification of the beam line elements used in the calculation and to provide a convenient means of repeating such calculations for arbitrary beam lines. Calculations and experimental measurements are compared and found to be in satisfactory agreement.


Subject(s)
Computers , Particle Accelerators , Scattering, Radiation , Software , Electrons , Energy Transfer , Models, Theoretical , Protons , Radiometry/methods
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