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Title: Measurement of energy deposition distributions produced in cylindrical geometry by irradiation with 15 MeV neutrons

Thesis/Dissertation ·
OSTI ID:6088079

Cellular survival experiments have shown that the biological damage induced by radiation depends on the density of energy deposition along the trajectory of the ionizing particle. The quantity L is defined to measure the density of energy transfer along a charged particle's trajectory. It is equal to sigma/l, where sigma is the energy transferred to a medium and l is the path length along which the transfer takes place. L is the stochastic quantity whose mean value is the unrestricted linear energy transfer, L/sub infinity/. Measurements of the distribution of L in a thin medium by secondary charged particles from fast neutron irradiation were undertaken. A counter operating under time coincidence between two coaxial cylindrical detectors was designed and built for this purpose. Secondary charged particles enter a gas proportional counter and deposit some energy sigma. Those particles traversing the chamber along a radial trajectory strike a CsI scintillator. A coincidence between both detectors' signals selects a known path length for these events, namely the radius of the cavity. Measurements of L distributions for l = 1 ..mu..m in tissue were obtained for 3 and 15 MeV neutron irradiation of a tissue-equivalent target wall and for 15 MeV neutron irradiation of a graphite wall. Photon events were corrected for by measurements with a Pb target wall and 15 MeV neutron irradiation as well as exposure to a pure photon field. The measured TE wall distributions with 15 MeV neutron bombardment show contributions from protons, ..cap alpha..-particles, /sup 9/Be and /sup 12/C recoils. The last three comprise the L distribution for irradiation of the graphite wall. The proton component of the measured L distributions at 3 and 15 MeV was compared to calculated LET distributions.

Research Organization:
Wisconsin Univ., Madison (USA)
OSTI ID:
6088079
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Thesis (Ph. D.)
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English