Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research

When astronauts travel in space, they are exposed to high energy cosmic radiations. The cosmic ray spectrum contains very high energy particles, generally up to several GeV per nucleon. Currently NASA is funding research on the effects, such as acute radiation sickness, of cosmic radiation. Animal m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feng, Shaoyong
Other Authors: Braby, Leslie A.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
RBE
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8530
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2010-08-85302013-01-08T10:42:35ZReference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE ResearchFeng, ShaoyongCosmic raysReference radiationRBEMicrodosimetryWhen astronauts travel in space, they are exposed to high energy cosmic radiations. The cosmic ray spectrum contains very high energy particles, generally up to several GeV per nucleon. Currently NASA is funding research on the effects, such as acute radiation sickness, of cosmic radiation. Animal models are used to conduct the studies of radiation effects of particles in the range of several MeV/nucleon to about 1000 MeV/nucleon. In order to compare different radiations, the biological effectiveness relative to a specific radiation is usually used. For low energy heavy ions and neutrons 250 keV photons are usually used for the reference radiation but their depth dose distribution is very different from that for cosmic rays. In this research, the advantages of using high energy electrons as the reference radiation for research on cosmic radiation were demonstrated. The conclusion is based on the evaluation of the dose distributions and microdosimetric spectra of the electrons and high energy protons as a function of depth in a tissue equivalent absorber as determined by Geant4 simulation.Braby, Leslie A.2011-10-21T22:03:30Z2011-10-22T07:12:32Z2011-10-21T22:03:30Z2011-10-22T07:12:32Z2010-082011-10-21August 2010thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8530en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cosmic rays
Reference radiation
RBE
Microdosimetry
spellingShingle Cosmic rays
Reference radiation
RBE
Microdosimetry
Feng, Shaoyong
Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
description When astronauts travel in space, they are exposed to high energy cosmic radiations. The cosmic ray spectrum contains very high energy particles, generally up to several GeV per nucleon. Currently NASA is funding research on the effects, such as acute radiation sickness, of cosmic radiation. Animal models are used to conduct the studies of radiation effects of particles in the range of several MeV/nucleon to about 1000 MeV/nucleon. In order to compare different radiations, the biological effectiveness relative to a specific radiation is usually used. For low energy heavy ions and neutrons 250 keV photons are usually used for the reference radiation but their depth dose distribution is very different from that for cosmic rays. In this research, the advantages of using high energy electrons as the reference radiation for research on cosmic radiation were demonstrated. The conclusion is based on the evaluation of the dose distributions and microdosimetric spectra of the electrons and high energy protons as a function of depth in a tissue equivalent absorber as determined by Geant4 simulation.
author2 Braby, Leslie A.
author_facet Braby, Leslie A.
Feng, Shaoyong
author Feng, Shaoyong
author_sort Feng, Shaoyong
title Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
title_short Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
title_full Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
title_fullStr Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
title_full_unstemmed Reference Radiation for Cosmic Rays in RBE Research
title_sort reference radiation for cosmic rays in rbe research
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8530
work_keys_str_mv AT fengshaoyong referenceradiationforcosmicraysinrberesearch
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