RAPHEX XII Flashcards
The ____ is the strongest force in the nucleus. A. electromagnetic force B. weak nuclear force C. gravitational force D. strong nuclear force E. None of above is true
strong nuclear force
There are four different forces in the nucleus. The gravitational force involved in the nucleus is very weak and can be ignored. The electromagnetic force between protons is quite strong, but it is repulsive and tends to disrupt the nucleus. The strong nuclear force is much stronger than the electromagnetic force and is responsible for holding the nucleons together in the nucleus. The weak nuclear force is very weak and appears in certain types of radioactive decay.
Alpha particle emission usually in occurs in atoms with _____. A. substantially more protons than neutrons in the nucleus B. substantially more protons than electrons in the atom C. nuclei with an atomic number larger than 82 D. nuclei with an atomic number less than 82 E. None of the above is true.
C. nuclei with an atomic number larger than 82
As the atomic number increases beyond 82, the coulomb forces of repulsion between the protons become large enough to overcome the nuclear forces that bind the nucleons. The unstable nucleus emits an alpha particle composed of 2 protons and 2 neutrons.
A. A 0.25-cm MLC can produce better conformality for small brain lesions. B. A 0.25-cm MLC may limit the use of monoisocentric plans for large fields (e.g., breast tangents with supraclav field).
ANSWER
C. A 0.25-cm MLC will require a separate treatment planning system. D. A 0.25-cm MLC can be used for IMRT and VMAT deliveries. E. Dynamic wedges can be used regardless of MLC width.
A 0.25-cm MLC will require a separate treatment planning system.
The smaller leaf width will result in more dose conformity around small lesions. Often the MLC containing smaller leaves will not cover the entire field length, so while the 0.25-cm MLC can be used for IMRT, VMAT, and dynamic wedge deliveries, large field techniques—such as single isocenter breast and supraclav treatments—may not be possible due to restrictions on the maximum field size that can be shaped with the MLC
The ion chambers of a linac monitor _____. A. output B. flatness C. symmetry D. All of the above are true. E. None of the above is true.
D. All of the above are true.
The ionization chambers in a linac are usually sealed and pressurized so that environmental variations do not affect machine output. They are located before the secondary collimator. They are designed such that they can measure output, beam flatness, and beam symmetry.
As the collimator setting decreases, photon backscatter into the monitor chamber _____. A. increases B. decreases C. remains the same D. There is not enough information given to answer this question.
increases
An 80-keV photon will most likely undergo _____ in water. A. coherent scattering B. the photoelectric effect C. Compton scattering D. pair production E. We are unable to determine thi
C. Compton scattering
Photon interactions are probabilistic; it is impossible to predict which interaction an individual photon will undergo. However, the relative importance of various types of interactions in water can be found in Table 5.2 of Khan’s The Physics of Radiation Therapy. A 10-keV monoenergetic photon beam has 95% photoelectric effects and 5% Compton effects. At 26 keV the relative percentage of interactions in water is 50% photoelectric effects and 50% Compton effects. At 60 keV the relative percentage of interactions in water is 7% photoelectric effect and 93% Compton effects.
Charged particle equilibrium occurs when charged particles leaving a volume and charged particles entering the same volume have _____. A. the same number of each type of particle at each specific energy B. the same number of each type of particle, regardless of energy C. the same number of particles, although the particle types may differ D. the same total energy, regardless of whether the particle types are the same E. the same total energy, regardless of whether the particle quantities are the same
A. the same number of each type of particle at each specific energy
In order for charged particle equilibrium to exist, the number of charged particles of each particular type and energy leaving a volume is the same as the number of charged particles of the same type and energy entering the same volume.
Of the following, _____ would be the most suitable for measuring CBCT dose on the linac. A. a Farmer-type ionization chamber B. a free air ionization chamber C. optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters (OSLDs) D. thermoluminescence dosimeters (TLDs) E. radiochromic film
A. a Farmer-type ionization chamber
Of the options listed, a Farmer-type ionization chamber would be the most suitable choice for measuring CBCT dose. A free-air ionization chamber is most often used by standards laboratories for measurements of exposure. OSLDs and TLDs have low sensitivity, and great care would need to be taken to ensure an accurate reading. Radiochromic film also would be difficult to use.
If an ion chamber is not sealed, the chamber reading for a given exposure will increase as the temperature _____ or the pressure _____. A. increases; increases B. increases; decreases C. decreases; increases D. decreases; decreases
C. decreases; increases
The density of air in the ion chamber cavity depends on the temperature and pressure, in accordance with the gas law. The density or mass of air in the chamber volume will increase as the temperature decreases or pressure increases. Exposure is defined as the ionization charge collected per unit mass of air. Therefore, the chamber reading for a given exposure will increase as the temperature decreases or as the pressure increases
An ion chamber scanning vertically in a water tank measures which of the following parameters for an electron treatment beam? A. backscatter factor B. tissue phantom ratio C. tissue maximum ratio D. percent depth ionization E. percent depth dose
D. percent depth ionization
The ion chamber actually measures the ionization by the radiation beam, which does not exactly coincide with the radiation dose. The stopping power ratio, which is energy-dependent and changes with depth, can be used to convert percent depth ionization (PDI) to percent depth dose (PDD).
What is physically happening when an optically stimulated luminescent dosimeter (OSLD) emits light?
ANSWER
A. An electron falls into an electron trap. B. An electron escapes from an electron trap. C. An electron travels freely through the valence band. D. An electron travels freely through the conduction band. E. None of the above is true
B. An electron escapes from an electron trap.
When an OSLD chip is irradiated, an electron from the valence band can get sufficient energy to move into the conduction band. As it falls back down from the conduction band it may get trapped by an electron trap. These traps are caused by imperfections in the lattice structure of the material. Visible light of a particular wavelength is used when reading out an OSLD chip, which frees the trapped electron. The energy difference between the trapped state and the valence band is emitted as visible light.
Of the following, a _____ is an absolute dosimeter. A. free-air ionization chamber B. calorimeter C. ferrous sulfate (Fricke) dosimeter D. All of the above are true. E. None of the above is true
D. All of the above are true.
Absolute dosimeters can determine radiation dose without reference to another dosimeter. A free-air ionization chamber is often used by standards laboratories and measures electric charge resulting from ionization of air in a radiation field. Calorimeters measure the heat resulting from the deposition of radiation energy. A Fricke dosimeter is a chemical dosimeter, where the oxidation of ferrous ions to ferric ions in a radiation field is measured.
The average energy of a linac’s 15-MV photon beam at the surface of the patient is _____. A. 3 MeV B. 5 MeV C. 7.5 MeV D. 10 MeV E. 15 MeV
5 MeV
The average energy of a bremsstrahlung x-ray energy spectrum is approximately Emax / 3, where Emax is equal to the ionizing potential of the linac for that beam, in this case 15 MV.
A patient is being treated with a four-field box with 6-MV x-ray beams equally weighted to the prescription point. At setup it is noted that the AP beam’s depth to the prescription point is 2 cm less than expected, and the depths of the other 3 beams are unchanged. What is the approximate dose difference at the prescription point? A. 10% less than planned B. 5% less than planned C. 2% less than planned D. E.
2% more than planned 5% more than planned
D. 2% more than planned
A general approximation is that each centimeter of missing tissue results in 3.5% less attenuation for a 6-MV x-ray beam; 2 cm × 3.5%/cm / 4 is approximately 2% more dose than expected.
For an MV photon treatment on a patient with a bolus placed on top of an ill-fitting thermoplastic immobilization mask, as an air gap between the bolus on the mask and the patient surface increases, the depth of maximum dose will _____ and the surface dose will _____. A. decrease; decrease B. increase; decrease C. decrease; increase D. increase; increase E. remain the same; decrease
B. increase; decrease
The effect of bolus is reduced as the air gap increases, resulting in the depth of maximum dose increasing and surface dose decreasing.
It’s like having an air gap in the PDD. You once had electronic equilibrium, then you removed it. So the buildup region exists again, and dmax gets deeper. The further you move away, the more the electrons you’ve created disperse and scatter away, so surface dose decreases.
A patient is treated with an isocentric AP/PA setup on a linac. The anterior SSD is 86 cm, and the posterior SSD is 92 cm. The patient’s AP/PA separation is _____. A. 14 cm B. 16 cm C. 22 cm D. 28 cm E. This cannot be determined from the information given.
C. 22 cm
The isocenter is 100 cm – 86 cm = 14 cm from the anterior surface and 100 cm – 92 cm = 8 cm from the posterior surface. Therefore, the patient separation is 14 cm + 8 cm = 22 cm.
The collimator setting is the field length and width as defined at the level of the _____. A. patient entrance surface B. patient exit surface C. jaws in the linac head D. multileaf collimator in the linac head E. isocenter
E. isocenter
The collimator setting reported by the linac is the size of the projection of the jaws at the isocenter of the machine. In other words, the size of the physical jaw opening that one would measure with a ruler in the head of the linac would be much smaller than the reported collimator setting. The collimator setting is independent of the position of the patient, although surely the patient could be placed such that the isocenter is at their entrance or exit surface.
A patient is being treated to a dose of 10 Gy to a depth of 10 cm with a 6-MV posterior photon beam in an SAD setup. The spinal cord is located upstream of the target at a 4-cm depth. The TMRs are 0.770 and 0.946 for 10 cm and 4 cm depths, respectively. What is the dose to the spinal cord?
A. 8.0 Gy B. 10.8 Gy C. 12.2 Gy D. 13.9 Gy E. This cannot be determined using the information given.
D. 13.9 Gy
Given that the SPD is the source to point of interest distance, D(d1) / D(d2) = TMR(d1) / TMR(d2) × (SPD2 / SPD1)2 10 Gy / D(4 cm) = (0.770 / 0.946) × (94 / 100)2 D(4 cm) = 13.9 Gy
External beam prostate treatments should use photon energies less than or equal to 10 MV for patients with a pacemaker because with higher energies _____. A. the fields will be too large and will include the pacemaker B. photons scattered from the treatment fields would give more than 5 Gy to the pacemaker C. photons scattered from the treatment head would give more than 5 Gy to the pacemaker D. stray neutrons that penetrate the linac shielding can trigger pacemaker irregularities E. prostate cancer is always treated with lower-energy photons or brachytherapy
D. stray neutrons that penetrate the linac shielding can trigger pacemaker irregularities
It has been observed that stray neutrons can trigger pacemaker irregularities. Significant numbers of neutrons are only produced for photon beams of energies above 10 MeV. (See the Report of AAPM Task Group 203, Management of Radiotherapy Patients with Implanted Cardiac Pacemakers and Defibrillato
Tungsten eye shields effectively protect the lens and eye for _____. A. Co-60 teletherapy B. megavoltage x-ray teletherapy C. megavoltage electron teletherapy D. eye plaque brachytherapy E. All of the above are true.
C. megavoltage electron teletherapy
A tungsten eye shield can be used to stop external beam electrons, but it would not be thick enough to stop Co-60 gamma rays or MV x-rays.
what does raphex use for 90% isodoe line for electrons?
E/3.2