Radiation Measurement Units - Measure Matters!
- Activity: Decay rate. SI: Becquerel (Bq); Traditional: Curie (Ci).
- Exposure: Ionization in air (X/γ rays). SI: Coulomb/kilogram (C/kg); Traditional: Roentgen (R).
- Absorbed Dose (D): Energy absorbed per unit mass. SI: Gray (Gy); Traditional: rad.
- Equivalent Dose (H): Biological effect, accounts for radiation type. $H = D \times W_R$ ($W_R$: radiation weighting factor). SI: Sievert (Sv); Traditional: rem.
- Effective Dose (E): Overall risk, accounts for tissue sensitivity. $E = \sum (H_T \times W_T)$ ($W_T$: tissue weighting factor). SI: Sievert (Sv); Traditional: rem.

| Quantity | SI Unit | Traditional Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Activity | Bq | Ci |
| Exposure | C/kg | R |
| Absorbed Dose | Gy | rad |
| Equivalent Dose | Sv | rem |
| Effective Dose | Sv | rem |
Radioactivity Units - How Active?
- Radioactivity: Spontaneous decay of unstable atomic nuclei, emitting radiation.
- Units:
- Becquerel (Bq): SI unit.
- $1 \text{ Bq} = 1 \text{ disintegration per second (dps)}$.
- Curie (Ci): Older unit.
- $1 \text{ Ci} = $ $3.7 \times 10^{10}$ $\text{ dps}$ (activity of 1g Ra-226).
- Becquerel (Bq): SI unit.
- Key Conversion:
- $1 \text{ Ci} = $ $3.7 \times 10^{10}$ $\text{ Bq}$.
- $1 \text{ mCi} = $ $37$ $\text{ MBq}$.
⭐ The conversion $1 \text{ Ci} = $ $3.7 \times 10^{10}$ $\text{ Bq}$ (or $1 \text{ mCi} = $ $37$ $\text{ MBq}$) is frequently tested.
- 📌 Mnemonic: 'Curie is Curious and Big, Becquerel is Basic and Small.'
- Specific Activity: Activity per unit mass (e.g., Bq/g, Ci/g).
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Exposure & Absorbed Dose - Zap Zone!
-
Exposure (X): Measures the ability of X-rays and gamma rays to ionize air.
- Defined as the total charge of ions of one sign produced in air when all electrons liberated by photons in a volume element of air are completely stopped in air, divided by the mass of air in that volume element.
- Units: Roentgen (R) and Coulomb/kilogram (C/kg).
- $1 \text{ R} = 2.58 \times 10^{-4} \text{ C/kg}$ of air.
-
Absorbed Dose (D): Represents the energy absorbed per unit mass from any ionizing radiation in any material.
- Units: Gray (Gy) and rad.
- $1 \text{ Gy} = 1 \text{ Joule/kilogram (J/kg)}$.
- $1 \text{ rad} = 0.01 \text{ Gy} = 0.01 \text{ J/kg}$.
- Key conversion: $1 \text{ Gy} = 100 \text{ rad}$.
-
Relationship (f-factor):
- The f-factor (Roentgen-to-rad conversion factor) relates exposure (X) in air to absorbed dose (D) in a specific material.
- $D_{material} = f \times X_{air}$.
- The f-factor varies with photon energy and the atomic composition of the material.
⭐ For practical purposes in soft tissue, an exposure of 1 Roentgen (R) results in an absorbed dose of approximately 1 rad (or $0.01 \text{ Gy}$).
Equivalent & Effective Dose - Body Blows!
- Equivalent Dose (H): Adjusts absorbed dose (D) for biological harm of different radiation types.
- Formula: $H = D \times W_R$.
- Units: Sievert (Sv); $1 \text{ Sv} = 100 \text{ rem}$.
- Radiation Weighting Factors ($W_R$):
- X-rays, γ-rays, β-particles: $W_R=1$.
- α-particles: $W_R=\textbf{20}$ (high biological damage).
- Neutrons: Variable (energy-dependent).
⭐ Alpha particles have a Radiation Weighting Factor (WR) of 20, making them 20x more damaging than X-rays for the same absorbed dose.
- Effective Dose (E): Sums equivalent doses in tissues ($H_T$), weighted by tissue sensitivity ($W_T$), for overall body risk.
- Formula: $E = \sum(H_T \times W_T)$.
- $W_T$: Tissue Weighting Factor (e.g., gonads high, bone surface low).
- Unit: Sievert (Sv).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Roentgen (R): Measures exposure in air (X-rays & gamma rays only).
- Gray (Gy): Unit of absorbed dose (energy/mass); 1 Gy = 100 rad.
- Sievert (Sv): Unit of equivalent & effective dose (biological effect); 1 Sv = 100 rem.
- Equivalent Dose: Absorbed dose × WR (Radiation Weighting Factor); WR for X/gamma/beta = 1, alpha = 20.
- Effective Dose: Sum of (Equivalent Dose × WT) (Tissue Weighting Factor); reflects overall cancer risk.
- Becquerel (Bq): Unit of activity (decay rate); 1 Ci = 3.7 × 1010 Bq.
- KERMA: Kinetic Energy Released per MAss; measured in Gy.
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