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Interactions of Photons With Matter

The document discusses various interactions of photons with matter, including the Compton effect, photoelectric effect, and pair creation. It provides details on the history and theoretical development of the Compton effect, including Thomson and Compton's contributions. Formulas for relating the energies and angles of incident and scattered photons in Compton scattering are also derived.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views

Interactions of Photons With Matter

The document discusses various interactions of photons with matter, including the Compton effect, photoelectric effect, and pair creation. It provides details on the history and theoretical development of the Compton effect, including Thomson and Compton's contributions. Formulas for relating the energies and angles of incident and scattered photons in Compton scattering are also derived.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter IV:

Interactions of photons with matter

1
Contents of the chapter

• Introduction

• Compton effect

• Photoelectric effect

• Pair creation

• Attenuation coefficient

2
Basic considerations

• Photons are classified according to their mode of origin:


– ° rays accompany nuclear transitions E° = hº = Ei-Ef (E° > 100 keV)
– Bremsstrahlung (continuous X rays) result from a charged particle
acceleration
– Characteristic X rays are emitted in atomic transitions of bound
electrons between the K, L, M, … shells in atoms (EX < 100 keV)
• Momentum with p = E°/c = ħk and k the
wavenumber
• Photons interact with matter in a single event → between two
events they have no interaction with matter (unlike the
charged particles via the Coulomb force)
• Photons are indirectly ionizing radiations
3
Different interactions of ° with matter (1)

For 1 keV < E° < 1 GeV → Classification of Fano: 4 types of


interactions and 3 consequences of the interaction → 12
theoretical processes are possible (even if a few of them are
extremely rare or were never observed)

Type of interaction Effect of the interaction


1: Atomic electron A: Coherent diffusion
2: Atomic nucleus B: Incoherent diffusion
3: Electric field of the nuclei
C:Ttotal absorption
and atomic electrons
4: Mesonic field of atomic
nuclei

4
Different interactions of ° with matter (2)

• Only 3 effects are dominating →


1. Compton Effect (1B): the photon is scattered by a free or weakly bound
electron → the sum of the scattered photon energy and of the electron
kinetic energy is equal to the energy of the incident photon
2. Photoelectric effect (1C): The photon is absorbed by the electronic
system (atom) → it gives all his energy → an atomic electron is emitted
out of the atom with a kinetic energy equal to the energy of the
photon minus the binding energy of the atomic electron
3. Pair creation (3C): In the electric field of a nucleus or of an electron →
the photon disappears and an electron-positron pair appears
• 2 other processes can also play a role →
1. Rayleigh scattering (1A): the photon is scattered without energy loss
by an electronic system (atom)
2. Photodisintegration of the nucleus (2C): the photon is absorbed by the
nucleus and a particle is emitted (°, ®, p, n, …)
5
Correspondence atomic shell ↔ electronic configuration

Couche atomique Configuration e-

6
Examples of binding energies

7
Energies are in keV
Remark

• Photon cannot be absorbed by free electron (and then gives it


all its energy)
• Conservation of the energy and of the momentum with hº0 the
energy of the photon and m, E et p, the mass, the total energy
and the momentum of the electron→

• This implies E = pc+mc2 and by definition → E2 = p2c2+m2c4 →


only possible for p = hº0 = 0 → must be rejetcted

8
Compton effect

• Scattering by a free electron (in the range of energy where


Compton effect occurs → electrons are considered as free →
when this approximation is no more true → photoelectric
effect is dominating)
• The photon gives a part of its energy to an electron

9
History of Compton effect: Thomson

• Thomson classically calculates (1906) the scattering cross section of


an electromagnetic wave by a free electron
• Hypothese: Due to the force caused by the electric field of the wave
→ oscillation of the electron → this oscillation has same frequency as
the wave and has the same direction as the electric field → electric
dipole → the electron irradiate → diffusion of the incident wave in a
continuous way
• For a non-polarized incident wave → Thomson calculates the
diffusion cross section d¾0 in solid angle d (with µ the angle formed
with the direction of the incident wave) →

with re = e2/4¼²0mc2 = 2.8 10-15 m, the classique radius of the electron


10
Demonstration of Thomson (1)

• Let’s consider an electromagnetic wave with frequency º that


interacts with a free electron (mass m, charge -e) → the electron
undergoes a force F due to the incident electric field:

with the direction of polarization


• The motion equation of the electron is →

• In the dipolar approximation the emitted power per unit of solid


angle is (differential equation of Larmor - see electromagnetism
teaching) →

11
with £ the angle between the polarization direction and the observer
Demonstration of Thomson (2)

• From equation of motion we directly obtain h a2 i, the mean


square acceleration →

• The differential power becomes →

• We consider now the modulus of the Poynting vector that is for


the energy flux by second (see you know what…) →

12
Demonstration of Thomson (3)

• The differential cross section is obtained with →

• If we consider an non-polarized incident wave → we have to


work out the average of £ →

with µ, the scattering angle


• We thus obtain the equation of Thomson →

13
Total cross section of Thomson

• By integration over angles → total scattering cross section of


Thomson →

• In his demonstration → the incident wave is scattered in a


continuous way

14
History of Compton effect: Compton

• Measurement of Compton (1922) → the scattered wave has


not a continuum spectrum but follows the relation →

with ¸0 and ¸1 the wavelengths of incident and scattered


photons and h/mc = ¸C, the wavelength of Compton
• This expression shows that the wavelength displacement does
not depend on Z and on the incident wavelength and that the
energy and momentum lost by the photon goes to only one
electron

15
Demonstration of the expression of Compton (1)

• In the laboratory frame → conservation law of the four-vector


energy-momentum before and after the scattering →

16
Demonstration of the expression of Compton (2)

• Conservation laws →

• With E2 = p2c2+m2c4 →

• And with:

17
Relations between energies and angles (1)

• We consider E0 = the incident photon energy, E1 = the scattered


photon energy, T = E0- E1 = the kinetic energy given to the
electron, µ = the photon diffusion angle, Á = the angle
between the trajectory of the electron and the photon initial
direction and ® = E0 /mc2 = the ratio between incident photon
energy et the electron mass energy →

18
Relations between energies and angles (2)
• As 0 < µ < ¼ → (E1)min = E0/(1+2®) and (E1)max = E0 µ

10°

20°

30°

60°
90°
120°
150°
180°

511 keV

255 keV →
backscattering
19
Relations between energies and angles (3)

20
Remarks on the energy of the scattered photon

• The energy modification for the photon depends on the


incident photon energy
• For small E0 → small energy loss for the photon (for any µ)
• For E0 ↗ → the variation of the energy of the scattered photon
as a function of the angle becomes important
• For 90° → E1 always < 511 keV (= mc2)
• For 180° → E1 always < 255 keV (= mc2/2) → backscattered
photon → backscattering peak in ° spectra

21
Relations between energies and angles (4)
• We have 0 < Á < ¼/2 → Tmin = 0 and Tmax = E0/[1+(1/2®)]

T = E0

• For large E0 → Tmax ≈ E0 - 255 keV (backscattered photon) 22


Relations between energies and angles (5)
Á

23
Angular-differential cross section for Compton effect (1)
• Equation of Klein-Nishina (quantum electrodynamics): valid
for free electrons at rest
• The angular-differential scattering cross section of a non-
polarized photon in the solid angle d around the direction
making an angle µ with the initial direction of the photon is
given by →

with re, the classical radius of the electron


• Remark → no dependence on Z

24
Angular-differential cross section (2)

For ® ¿ → E1 ≈ E0 → d¾ ≈ d¾0 → we obtain the Thomson cross


section 25
Angular-differential cross section (3)

26
Energy-differential cross section (1)

• From the angular-differential cross section → Energy-


differential cross sections →

27
Energy-differential cross section (2)

T = Tmax
d¾/dT (unité arbitraire)

28
Total cross section for the Compton effect (1)

• After integration of the Klein-Nishina cross section over


angles →

• For ® ¿ → ¾ ≈ ¾0 = 8¼re2/3 (Thomson cross section)


σ (Thompson unit)

29
Total cross section for the Compton effect (2)

• For ® À → ¾ → (ln ®)/® → Compton cross section ↘ when


photon energy ↗
• Indeed we observe for ® À → angular distribution
predominant in µ = 0 → no diffusion → no energy transfer →
no effect

• The atomic cross section a¾ = Z¾ is thus / Z

30
Collision = Scattering + Absorption
• The cross section ¾ represents the scattering probability → a part of
the energy is scattered and the other one is given to the e- (absorbed)
• To characterize this aspect → we define a scattered cross section ¾s
and an absorption cross section ¾a with ¾ = ¾s + ¾a

31
Coherent and incoherent scattering (1)

• For E0 ¿ → we cannot consider that e- are free and at rest →


scattering by the whole electronic system (atom)
• If the atom stays in its initial state → the energy of the photon
does not change but it changes its direction (the atom takes the
momentum difference) → Rayleigh scattering (coherent
scattering)
• If the atom changes its state → the photon loss energy →
incoherent scattering
• For large energies → incoherent scattering = Compton scattering

32
Coherent and incoherent scattering (2)

• Approximation for coherent scattering → the electronic system


corresponds to a system with charge Ze and mass Zm → the
Rayleigh scattering cross section is →

• In reality → the structure of the electronic cloud implies a


decrease of the scattering → introduction of the factor of
atomic structure F →

33
Coherent and incoherent scattering (3)

• For incoherent scattering → modification of the Klein-Nishina


cross section by the function of incoherent scattering S → S
considers the fact that the electrons of the atom are bonded →
the photon can be incapable of ejecting an electron from the
atom →

• For large energies → S → 1 → Compton cross section

34
Rayleigh
Coherent and incoherent scattering (4)

incoherent
=
Compton

incoherent

Remark → coherent scattering ↗ for Z ↗ 35


Comparison incoherent - Compton

36
Photoelectric effect

• The photoelectric effect is a process in which an incident


photon interacts with an atom and an electron is emitted
(process correctly explained by Einstein in 1905)
• This process of photon capture by an atom with an electron
excited in a continuous state is the inverse process of
spontaneous emission of a photon by an excited atom

37
Energy conservation

• There are absorption of a photon with energy hº0 that is completely


absorbed by an atom and consequent emission of an electron (called
photoelectron) with a kinetic energy T out of an atomic shell
characterized by a binding energy Bi (i = K, LI, LII, LIII, …) → by
neglecting the recoil energy of the nucleus (due to ≠ of mass) →

• The energy conservation implies hº0 > Bi


• When hº0 ↗ the probability of photoelectric effect ↘ since the
behaviour of the electron more and more approaches the one of a
free electron (and the absorption by a free e- is impossible)
• The more bound electrons (shell K) have the largest probability to
absorb the photon (with always the condition hº0 > BK) 38
Bi-2 (keV2)
Binding energy

For Z > 30 → binding energies approximatively follow Bi = ai(Z-


ci)2 (with ai and ci constant for each shell) 39
Cross section (1)

• The cross section per atom a¿ can be decomposed into a sum of


partial cross sections (a¿i) corresponding to the emission of an
electron from a given shell i →

• The calculation of a¿K has been done for a hydrogen-like atom


in the Born approximation using a plane wave as wave function
for the emitted electron
• We suppose hº0 ¿ mc2 (non-relativistic approximation) and
hº0 À BK (interaction between the nucleus and the electron
neglected)
40
Cross section (2)

• We find (with ®, the fine structure constant and ¾0, the


Thomson cross section) →

• As re /a0 = ®2 (with a0, the Bohr radius) →

• And as, for a hydrogen-like atom, BK = ®2Z 2mec2/2 →

41
Cross section (3)

• Factor a0/Z → approximatively = to the atom size


• Variation with hº0-7/2 for the energy
• When hº0 ≈ BK → Born approximation no more valid →
introduction of a correction term f(») →

• For » → 0 (i.e. hº0 À BK) → f(») → 1 → previous situation


• For » → 1 (i.e. hº0 ≈ BK) → f(») →

42
Cross section (4)

• The other partial cross sections have the same behaviour as a¿K
→ we generally write the total cross section as→

with n varying between 4 and 4.6 and k varying between 1 and


3 (C is a constant)
• For hº0 / 0.1 MeV (most important energy range for the
photoelectric effect) → n ≈ 4 and k ≈ 3
• For hº0 ' 1 MeV → n ≈ 4.5 and k ≈ 1

43
Variation of a¿ with hº0

hº0-3

hº0-2

hº0-1

44
Variation of a¿ with Z

45
Cross section: Example (1)

BL1(Pb) = 15.9 keV


BL2(Pb) = 15.2 keV
BL3(Pb) = 13.0 keV

BK(Pb) = 88 keV

For E > 88 keV → the 2 e- of the K shell contribute for 3/4 of the cross section (by
46
comparison to the 80 other e-) ↔ large importance of Bi in a¿
Cross section: Example (2)

Comparison theory ↔ experiment


47
Angular distribution of the photoelectrons (1)

• In non-relativistic case → the differential cross section da¿/d is


/ f(µ) →

with ¯ = v/c, the relative velocity of the photoelectron and µ, the


emission angle of the photoelectron relatively to the initial
direction of the photon
• Cross section = 0 in the direction of the incident photon (µ = 0) →
the electron aims to be emitted in the direction of the electric
field of the electromagnetic wave
• For E photons ↗ → more and more electrons are ejected in the
forward direction
48
Angular distribution of the photoelectrons (2)

• In the relativistic case →

• In both cases → For photons energy ↗ → more and more


electrons are ejected in the forward direction

49
Angular distribution of the photoelectrons (3)

50
Bipartition angle

• Bipartition angle µb: angle for which 1/2 of the photoelectrons


are emitted in the forward direction inside a cone with half-
angle smaller than µb

• For instance → for hº0 = 0.5 MeV → 1/2 of the photoelectrons


are emitted inside a cone with half-angle ' 30°
51
Consecutive phenomena
After a photoelectric effect → hole in an inner-shell →
electronic rearrangement → emission of a X-ray
(fluorescence) or an Auger electron → definition of the
fluorescence yield ωi (photon emission probability after a
transition to the shell i) Auger electron
→ E=BK-BL-BL

X ray→ E=BK-BL

52
K-shell fluorescence yield

53
Pair production

• The photon is completely absorbed and its place appears a


electron-positron pair. This process only takes place in the field
of a nucleus or of an electron (more rarely)

• For the pair production in the electric field of an atomic


electron → triplet production (a part of the energy is
transferred to the initial electron)
• What is the minimal energy of the incident photon to have
pair production?
54
Conservation laws (1)
• We work initially in the frame of the « target » particle with
mass M → this particle is at rest →

• After interaction → we work in the center of mass frame →

55
Conservation laws (2)

• After the interaction → center of mass frame →

• We note Ttot = Te + Tp + TC
• By conservation of the invariant P2 = (E/c)2+p2 →

56
Conservation laws (3)

• The minimum energy hº0,min is obtained by equalizing both


expressions and by considering the kinetic energy Ttot = 0 →

• In the nucleus field → M À m → hº0,min = 2mc2


• In the electron field → M = m → hº0,min = 4mc2

• Remark → It is possible to have pair production in the electron


field for photon energy between 2mc2 and 4mc2 because the
atom can take a part of initial momentum → however the
probability of this process is extremely weak
57
Pair production cross section in a nucleus field (1)

• Pair creation occurs inside the electronic cloud → the screening


effect due to atomic electrons is important
• Cross sections calculations made by Bethe and Heitler (1934)
• In the nucleus field → attractive force for the electron and
repulsive force the positron → their energy distributions are
different
• However → weak effect (< 0.0075 £ Z MeV) → can be
neglected → the differential cross section for the creation of an
electron with kinetic energy T− is equal to the one of creation
of a positron with kinetic energy T+ = hº0−2mc −T− and is
symmetric with respect to the mean energy →

58
Pair production cross section in a nucleus field (2)

• The energy-differential cross section is →

with ¾p = ®re2 = 5.80 £ 10-32 m2


• It can be written →

with x = T+ /(hº0-2mec2)

59
Results for P(x,hº0,Z)

60
Comments on the function P(x,hº0,Z)

• The function is symmetric

• The function P does not depend a lot on the atomic number Z


→ the cross section is thus proportional to Z2

• The function P varies slowly with the energy hº0 of the photon

• The shapes of various curves are similar

• For 0.2 < x < 0.8 → P is approximately constant

61
Total cross section

• The total cross section is given by integration on T+ →

with h P i, the mean value of P


• h P i does not depend a lot on Z and is slowly increasing with
hº0 → becomes constant for large energies (> 100 MeV) due to
the screening of the nuclear field by the atomic electrons
62
Fuction h P i

• Line: nucleus field


• Dash: electron field 63
Cross section for triplet production

• Very complex calculations


• It is possible to show →

• And thus →

with C, parameter dependent only on hº0 such as C → 1 for hº0


→ 1 and ↗ slowly for hº0 ↘ (C ≈ 2 for hº0 = 5 MeV)
• The triplet production contributes little to the total cross
section except for media with small Z (1% for Pb and 5-10% for
Z » 10) 64
Function h P itriplet

• Line: nucleus field


• Dash: electron field 65
e- - e+ direction of emission

• For hº0 quite larger than the energy threshold, electrons and
positrons are emitted in forward direction
• Mean emission angle (relatively to the direction of the photon
is roughly (radians) →

• Example: For hº0 = 5 MeV → h T i = 1.989 MeV and h µ i = 0.26


radians ' 15°
66
Consecutive phenomenon to the pair production

• First, positron is slowing down in the medium (large cross


section for Coulombian interactions)

• Second, annihilation of the positron when it is (quasi) at rest


with an electron at rest in the medium

• After the annihilation → two photons of 511 keV energy are


emitted with an angle of 180° between them (conservation
laws)

67
Photodisintegration of nuclei

• The photon is absorbed by an atom and a particle is emitted.

• That particle can be a photon or a light particle: p, n, α,…

• This interaction is possible when the photon energy is larger


to the threshold energy of the process (between 8 and 20
MeV)

68
Comparison of various effects

Photoelectrique: complex

Z effect + C factor

Thomson
Z2 effect

Z effect

69
Comparison of the three dominant effects

70
Attenuation coefficients (1)

• The 3 main photon interaction processes in matter have been


characterized by their atomic scattering cross section :
– Photoelectric effect: a¿
– Compton effect: a¾ = Z¾
– pair creation: aκ
• As other processes play a negligible role in our energy range →
the total atomic cross section a ¹ is →

71
Attenuation coefficients (2)

• As previously seen → in a thin target (with atomic density N) of width


dx, the scattering probability for 1 photon is a ¹Ndx
• For a monoenergetic beam of I photons (k) per time unit → the
collision rate is Ia ¹Ndx
• The variation dI of the intensity after crossing the target is (by
assuming that each collision implies a loss in the beam → all
scattering are absorbing) → dI = -Ia ¹Ndx
• For a thick target (width l) and an initial beam ? to the target with I0
particles → the intensity after the target is →

• ¹ = a¹N: Linear attenuation coefficient (unit: m-1) → allows to the


evaluate the scattering rate

72
Remark on experimental conditions

To check this exponential equation → a particular geometry is


needed → narrow beam geometry that prevents deflected
primaries and secondaries to reach the detector

« large distance »
« large distance »

uniform

Narrow beam geometry


93
Narrow beam geometry: characteristics

• Large distance between the source and the attenuator →


particles perpendicular to the attenuator
• Large distance between attenuator and detector → each
particle deflected in the attenuator will miss the detector
(intensity of the primary beam in the detector independent of
the distance of the attenuator ↔ intensity of the deflected
primaries and of the secondaries ↘ with the square of this
distance) → the relative intensity of the primary beam ↗ with
this distance
• The beam is collimated → it uniformly covers the detector → ↘
of the number of deflected primaries and of secondaries
generated inside the attenuator
94
Narrow beam geometry: shielding

• The shield around the attenuator stops all incident radiations


except those passing through the aperture

• The shield around the detector stops all radiations except


passing through the aperture (µ ≈ 0°) → Pb for X-rays or °
(advantage: small thickness)

755
Example of attenuation experiment

Transmission of °
from 60Co (1.17 and
1.33 MeV) though a
Cu target

76
Alternative coefficients

• We van write (with M, the molar masse of the medium, ½ its


density and NA the Avogadro number):

• (½l): Area density (unit: kg m-2)


• ¹/½: Mass attenuation coefficient (unit: m2 kg-1) →

• ¸ = 1/¹: Mean free path (unit: m) → mean distance travelled


by a photon between two collisions
• ½/¹: Mass attenuation length (unit: kg m-2)
77
Mass attenuation coefficient (1)

• ¹/½: Mass attenuation coefficient (unit: m2kg-1) → ratio of


dI/I by ½dl with dI/I, the fraction of indirectly ionizing
radiations which undergo interactions along the distance dl
travelled inside a medium of density ½
• Global coefficient global → takes into account the interactions
of particles in matter regardless of the nature of the
interaction
• The mass coefficients are directly proportional to the cross
section and do not depend on the physical nature of the
target → these coefficients are displayed in databases

78
Mass attenuation coefficient (2)

• In a medium with various atom species → the interaction


probability is the sum of interaction probabilities with each
atom specie (since the molecular binding energies are weak
compared to energies of ° rays)

• The total mass attenuation coefficient is given by →

with wi, the mass fractions of the various atom species

79
Attenuation coefficients: example of lead

80
Attenuation coefficients: practical examples

• 1 MeV photons in air: μ/ρ=0.064 cm2/g with ½(air)=0.001205


g/cm3 → ¹=7.71 10-5 cm-1 → after 1m → I/I0= 99.2%
• 10 keV photons in air: μ/ρ=5.1 cm2/g with ½(air)=0.001205
g/cm3 → ¹=6.15 10-3 cm-1 → after 1m → I/I0= 54.1%
• 1 MeV photons in lead: μ/ρ=0.070 cm2/g with ½(lead)=11.35
g/cm3 → ¹=7.95 10-1 cm-1 → after 1m → I/I0≈0%
→ after 1cm → I/I0≈45.2%
• 10 keV photons in lead: μ/ρ=130.6 cm2/g with ½(lead)=11.35
g/cm3 → ¹=1.48 103 cm-1 → after 1cm → I/I0≈0%

http://www.nist.gov/pml/data/xraycoef/index.cfm

81
Mass energy-transfer coefficient (1)

• The mass attenuation coefficient ¹/½ is a measurement of the


mean number of interactions between a photon and matter →
it allows to evaluate frequency of collisions
• For frequent applications → important parameter is the energy
transferred « locally » in the medium i.e. the energy
transferred to electrons → effects of photons in matter are due
(almost) exclusively to electrons → see « Radiation protection »
• Definition of another quantity more adapted to this aspect →
mass energy-transfer coefficient ¹tr/½

82
Mass energy-transfer coefficient (2)
• ¹tr/½: Mass energy-transfer coefficient (unit: m2kg-1) → quotient of
dEtr/(EN) (with E the energy of all particles excluding rest energy) by
½dl where dEtr/(EN) is the fraction of energy of the incident particles
transformed in kinetic energy of charged particles by interactions in a
depth dl of the medium of density ρ → also: ¹tr= (Etr/E)¹
• Also defined as →

with fi, the fractions of photon energy transferred to kinetic energy of


charged particles for all processes

83
Fractions of energy transferred

• Photoelectric effect →

with EX, the mean energy of fluorescence photons


• Compton effect →

withh E1 i, the mean energy of scattered photon → remark:


formally X-rays have to be considered → practically they can be
neglected
• Pair production (in the field of nucleus and of electron) →

84
Mass energy-absorption coefficient

• A part of kinetic energy of charged particles set in motion can


be absorbed no locally → a part of the energy can be lost in
radiative processes (especially Bremsstrahlung but also in-flight
annihilation or fluorescence radiations)
• ¹en/½: Mass energy-absorption coefficient (unit: m2kg-1) →
product of the mass energy-transfer coefficient by (1-g), with g
the fraction of energy lost on average in radiative processes as
the charged particles slow to rest in the material
• g is specific to the material

85
Comparison ¹tr ↔ ¹en (1)

Significant difference only for high


energies of the ° rays → when the
charged particles produced by the
interaction have enough energy to be
characterized by an important
Bremsstrahlung (especially for high Z
materials)

86
Comparison ¹tr ↔ ¹en (2)

87
Mass absorption coefficient

• ¹a/½: Mass absorption coefficient (unit: m2kg-1) → coefficient


for which only we suppose that only scattered photons
(coherently or incoherently) take energy away

• Coefficient rarely used (never!)

• Finally →

88
Schematic overview of the coefficients

89
Example of the application of these coefficients

Energy deposited inside water


by ° rays from a 60Co point-
source put at the center of a
water sphere as a function of
the distance between the
source and the detector

90

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