Ultraviolet radiation dosimetry with radiochromic film

Radiochromic film is tested for its broad-band response to ultraviolet (UV) B (290-320 nm) and A (320 nm400 nm), visible and infrared radiation produced by a solar simulator and examined for dosimetry in ultraviolet radiation. Results show that MD-55-2 radiochromic film in solar and fluorescent ligh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics in medicine & biology 2000-07, Vol.45 (7), p.1863-1868
Hauptverfasser: Butson, Martin J, Cheung, Tsang, Yu, Peter K N, Abbati, Donna, Greenoak, Gavin E
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container_end_page 1868
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1863
container_title Physics in medicine & biology
container_volume 45
creator Butson, Martin J
Cheung, Tsang
Yu, Peter K N
Abbati, Donna
Greenoak, Gavin E
description Radiochromic film is tested for its broad-band response to ultraviolet (UV) B (290-320 nm) and A (320 nm400 nm), visible and infrared radiation produced by a solar simulator and examined for dosimetry in ultraviolet radiation. Results show that MD-55-2 radiochromic film in solar and fluorescent light sources responds almost exclusively to broad-band UVA radiation with negligible colouration from UVB, visible and low level infrared radiation. A second order polynomial function approximates the change in optical density at 660 nm wavelength for film colouration with exposure to UVA from white light fluorescent and solar UV with exposures measured with a dedicated UVA dosimeter. Using a double exposure technique as used in radiation dosimetry where the film is firstly irradiated to a known UV dose, radiochromic film can be used as a quantitative measure of UVA exposure.
doi_str_mv 10.1088/0031-9155/45/7/311
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subjects Applied radiobiology (equipment, dosimetry...)
Biological and medical sciences
Biological effects of radiation
Calibration
Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation
Film Dosimetry - methods
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Infrared Rays
Light
Reproducibility of Results
Tissues, organs and organisms biophysics
Ultraviolet Rays
title Ultraviolet radiation dosimetry with radiochromic film
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