Dosimetry 2 Flashcards
1
Q
What is absolute dosimetry?
A
- The direct measurement of dose
- Performed in standards laboratories
- Measurements which define the unit Gy
2
Q
What is reference dosimetry?
A
- Transfer of dose standards to the hospital
- Measurements taken using hospital equipment so it can be calibrated
- Performed in line with IRR 17
- Only certain dosemeters can be used to calibrate the linac
3
Q
What is relative dosimetry?
A
- Measure dose but not to stringent standards of reference dose
- Data is relative
4
Q
What is In-Vivo dosimetry?
A
- Measurements take on/near the patient during treatment
- Verifies treatment plan
- Can be relative or can measure a dose
5
Q
Why measure in a phantom?
A
- An object that can be used to make measurements
- It is robust and can be easily set up
- Must mimic as closely as possible, attenuation and scattering that occurs in the human body
6
Q
Measuring radiation deposition using ionisation?
A
- measuring the amount of ionisation will give a measure of the energy
- This is principal method of dosimetry in the hospital
7
Q
What is charged particle equilibrium?
A
- Charged particle equilibrium (electrons entering = same as electrons leaving)
- will adding the device, change the behaviour of dose within the phantom
8
Q
What is the Bragg-Gray Cavity theory?
A
- If the hole is small enough (cavity) then it will not alter the number or distribution of the electrons in the material that would exist if cavity was not there
9
Q
What is required of a dosemeter?
A
- Accurate across a range of doses
- Have high precision to resolve small doses
- Be sensitive
- Be linear across working range
- Be independent of dose rate
- Can measure large and small doses equally well
- Can measure equally well different energies of photons, electrons etc
- Mut be able to represent dose in tissues
- Be small enough to measure high dose gradients
10
Q
How does the ionisation chamber work?
A
- Amount of ionisation produced is proportional to the amount of energy absorbed per unit mass of material
- separate positive and negative charges before they recombine
- High voltage is used and this allows the positive and negative charges to be collected individually
11
Q
What is a parallel plate chamber?
A
- Have thin (thinner than thimble) measurement space in the direction of the beam for better spatial resolution
- Particularly useful for measurements in electron beams and in the build up region of x-ray and electron beams
12
Q
What is an electrometer for?
A
- a device to produce the high voltage and measure the charge