Bragg–Gray cavity theory

According to the Bragg–Gray cavity theory, the ionization produced within a gas-filled cavity inside a medium is related to the energy absorbed in that surrounding medium. It was developed in 1936 by British scientists Louis Harold Gray, William Henry Bragg, and William Lawrence Bragg.

If the cavity is small enough that it does not change the number or energy distribution of the electrons that would exist in the medium in the absence of the cavity, and the energy is deposited only by electrons passing through the gas-filled cavity, then

E_\nu =  J_\nu \cdot W \cdot \rho

where

E_\nu is the energy absorbed per unit volume of the medium
J_\nu is the ionization per unit volume produced in the gas
W is the average energy lost by the secondary electrons per pair of ions formed in the gas
\rho is the ratio of the stopping power of the medium and the gas for the secondary electrons

References

  1. Khan, F. M. (2003). The physics of radiation therapy (3rd ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins: Philadelphia. ISBN 978-0-7817-3065-5.
  2. Gray, L. H. (1936). An ionization method for the absolute measurement of \gamma-ray energy. Proceedings of the Royal Society A, 156, pp. 578596

See Also


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