Bragg–Gray cavity theory explained
Bragg–Gray cavity theory relates the radiation dose in a cavity volume of material
to the dose that would exist in a surrounding medium
in the absence of the cavity volume. It was developed in 1936 by British scientists
Louis Harold Gray,
William Henry Bragg, and
William Lawrence Bragg.
Most often, material
is assumed to be a gas, however Bragg–Gray cavity theory applies to any cavity volume (gas, liquid, or solid) that meets the following Bragg-Gray conditions.
- The dimensions of the cavity containing
is small with respect to the range of charged particles striking the cavity so that the cavity does not perturb the charged particle field. That is, the cavity does not change the number, energy, or direction of the charged particles that would exist in
in the absence of the cavity.
- The absorbed dose in the cavity containing
is deposited entirely by charged particles crossing it.
When the Bragg-Gray conditions are met, then
,where
is the dose to material
(SI unit
Gray)
is the dose to the cavity material
(SI unit
Gray)
is the ratio of the mass-electronic stopping powers (also known as mass-collision stopping powers) of
and
averaged over the charged particle fluence crossing the cavity.
In an ionization chamber, the dose to material
(typically a gas) is
where
is the ionization per unit volume produced in the
(SI unit
Coulomb)
is the mass of the gas (SI unit
kg)
is the mean energy required to produce an ion pair in
divided by the charge of an electron (SI units
Joules/
Coulomb)
See also
Sources
- Khan, F. M. (2003). The physics of radiation therapy (3rd ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins: Philadelphia. .
- Gray. Louis Harold . 1936. An ionization method for the absolute measurement of
-ray energy.. Proceedings of the Royal Society A. 156. 578–596. 10.1098/rspa.1936.0169. 2023-02-20. free.
- Attix, F.H. (1986). Introduction to Radiological Physics and Radiation Dosimetry, Wiley-Interscience: New York. .
- Ma. Chang-ming . Nahum. A. E.. 1991. Bragg-Gray theory and ion chamber dosimetry for photon beams. Physics in Medicine & Biology. 36. 4. 13–428. 10.1088/0031-9155/36/4/001. 2023-02-20. free.