BME 560 Medical Imaging: X-ray, CT, and Nuclear Methods Radiation Physics Part 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHARACTERISTICS OF INTERACTIONS. In a radiation interaction, the radiation and the material with which it interacts may be considered as a single system.
Advertisements

Interactions of Radiation With Matter
PRACTICAL RADIATION PHYSICS FOR EMERGENCY MEDICAL PERSONNEL Module III.
X-radiation. X-rays are part of the electromagnetic spectrum. X-radiation (composed of X-rays) is a form of electromagnetic radiation. X- rays have a.
My Chapter 29 Lecture.
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY The Basics. The Nucleus The nucleus is composed of nucleons –protons –neutrons A nucleus is characterized by two numbers –atomic mass.
Nuclear Chemistry Targets: 1.I CAN Utilize appropriate scientific vocabulary to explain scientific concepts. 2.I CAN Distinguish between fission and fusion.
The structure of nuclei Nuclei are composed of just two types of particles: protons and neutrons. These particles are referred to collectively as nucleons.
Nuclear Physics Properties of Nuclei Binding Energy Radioactivity.
BME 560 Medical Imaging: X-ray, CT, and Nuclear Methods
Unit I: Physics Associated with Nuclear Medicine Instrumentation Part A: Atomic Structure and Radiation’s Interaction with Matter Lecture 2 CLRS 321 Nuclear.
Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Decay
Radiation Samar El-Sayed. Radiation Radiation is an energy in the form of electro-magnetic waves or particulate matter, traveling in the air.
Radiology is concerned with the application of radiation to the human body for diagnostically and therapeutically purposes. This requires an understanding.
Several nomenclatures are important: ● Nuclide: is any particular atomic nucleus with a specific atomic number Z and mass number A, it is equivalently.
Stopping Power The linear stopping power S for charged particles in a given absorber is simply defined as the differential energy loss for that particle.
ENTC 4390 MEDICAL IMAGING RADIOACTIVE DECAY.
1. Nucleons. Protons and neutrons 2. Nuclide
Nuclear Stability and Radioactivity AP Physics B Montwood High School R. Casao.
What is Radioactivity? Radioactive Decay. Nucleus contains protons and neutrons Electron circles the nucleus in orbits Proton: +1 charge, mass number.
Radioactivity Nuclear Chemistry
The Nucleus and Radioactivity
4. Electron capture:  This is an alternative to β + decay, when the nucleus has a smaller N/Z ratio compared to the stable nucleus (neutron deficient.
Interactions of Radiation With Matter
Basic Nuclear Physics - 3
Fundamentals of Radiation
The photon A “particle” of light A “quantum” of light energy The energy of a given photon depends on the frequency (color) of the light.
CHAPTER 10 CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT CHEMISTRY. RADIOACTIVE NUCLEI Nuclei that undergo spontaneous changes and emit energy in the form of radiation Nuclei.
By Daphne Laino and Danielle Roy. The Physics of Radiography Two basic types of x-ray imaging modalities: projection radiography and computed tomography.
Chapter 9 Nuclear Radiation
Chapter 1 Structure of matter Chapter 2 Nuclear transformation
Nuclear Medicine 4103 Section I Basic Chemistry. Structure of The Atom Nucleus: contains Protons (+) and Neutrons (0) Electron (-) orbiting the nucleus.
1 Nuclear Stability The larger the atom, the greater the proportion of the nucleus that must be neutrons. –The A/Z ratio is greater than 2 (or the N to.
Nuclear Chemistry Chapter 21.
Nuclear Chemistry , Nuclear Chemistry The study of the properties and reactions of atomic nuclei Atoms with identical atomic numbers.
Radioactivity and radioisotopes The nature of radiation Distinguishing Radiation Background Radiation.
1 Alpha Decay  Because the binding energy of the alpha particle is so large (28.3 MeV), it is often energetically favorable for a heavy nucleus to emit.
PHYSICAL BACKGROUND ATOMIC STRUCTURE, NUCLEONS AND ACTIVITY
Medical Imaging Radiation I. Naked to the Bone: Medical Imaging in the Twentieth Century (Paperback)by Bettyann Kevles Bettyann Kevles E=mc2: A Biography.
Radioactivity Manos Papadopoulos Nuclear Medicine Department
Nuclear Chemistry The Atom The atom consists of two parts: 1. The nucleus which contains: 2. Orbiting electrons. protons neutrons Multiple nuclei is.
Nuclear Chemistry Chapter 25. What do you think of when you hear Nuclear Chemistry?
3/2003 Rev 1 I.2.6 – slide 1 of 43 Session I.2.6 Part I Review of Fundamentals Module 2Basic Physics and Mathematics Used in Radiation Protection Modes.
Nuclear Chemistry Nucleons vs. Nuclide  Nucleons: General name referring to nucleus made up off Protons + Neutrons  Nuclide: Nuclear chemistry’s way.
Radioactive Decay.
Nuclear Physics Nuclei atomic number Z = protons
Dr. Mohammed Alnafea Methods of Radioactive Decay.
1 Atomic Structure Protons 1 1 p ( amu) Neutrons 1 0 n ( amu) Electrons ( amu) Neon Ne ( amu)
The Atom Lab # 2. What’s Inside an Atom? An atom is made up of a team of three players: protons, neutrons, and electrons They each have a charge, mass,
MEDICAL IMAGING Dr. Hugh Blanton ENTC Radiation and the Atom.
2/17/2016 L3-L4 1 PRINCE SATTAM BIN ABDUL AZIZ UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Nuclear Pharmacy (PHT 433 ) Dr. Shahid Jamil.
Nuclear Chemistry. Radioactivity The process by which materials give off such rays radioactivity; the rays and particles emitted by a radioactive source.
INTERACTIONS OF RADIATION WITH MATTER. twCshttp:// twCs
Interaction of Radiation with Matter
Nuclear Pharmacy 3. Electron Capture Decay  A parent nucleus may capture one of its own electrons and emit a neutrino (proton is converted to a neutron)
11 ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION. 22 EM RADIATION II ALSO CALLED RADIANT ENERGY ONLY A PORTION IS CALLED LIGHT TRAVELS IN WAVES TRAVELS THROUGH SPACE (VACUUM)
Nuclear Chemistry. Radioactivity  Nuclear Reactions – reactions in which the nuclei of unstable isotopes (radioisotopes) gain stability by undergoing.
CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT CHEMISTRY
Review or Introduction to Atomic and Nuclear Physics
FRCR II - Radioactivity
Interactions of Radiation With Matter
General Physics (PHY 2140) Lecture 37 Modern Physics Nuclear Physics
General Physics (PHY 2140) Lecture 37 Modern Physics Nuclear Physics
Radioactive Decay.
General Physics (PHY 2140) Lecture 37 Modern Physics Nuclear Physics
Radioactive Decay.
Radioactive Decay.
Interaction of Radiation with Matter
Nuclear Physics 243 NMT Dr. Abdo Mansour
Presentation transcript:

BME 560 Medical Imaging: X-ray, CT, and Nuclear Methods Radiation Physics Part 1

Today Forms of Radiation Particulate Radiation –Electron interactions with matter EM Radiation Nuclear Transitions Decay

What is Radiation? Radiation: Energy in the form of traveling waves or subatomic particles moving through space –May or may not have mass –May or may not have charge

Types of Radiation Ionizing: capable of producing an ion pair from interaction with an atom –Usually with energy > 13.6 eV Non-ionizing: incapable of producing an ion pair Ion pairs are reactive and may cause biological damage

Radiation

Forms of Radiation Particulate: particle-based, has mass –Protons, neutrons, electrons, positrons, alphas Electromagnetic: no mass –Gamma rays, X-rays, Ultraviolet Examples: –X-ray tubes –PET radionuclides

Ionization and Excitation Both transfer energy to an orbital electron –Let E b be the electron binding energy –Ionization: Energy is enough to remove electron from orbit –Excitation: Energy is enough to transition electron to higher orbital –In both cases, the hole will be filled and energy released. Radiation (E) KL M N Ejected electron (E e )

Particulate Radiation Alpha particle: He nucleus (2 protons, 2 neutrons) Beta particle: Electron (  -) or positron (  +) Proton Neutron

Particulate Radiation Properties: –Alpha: very high mass, highly charged, very highly ionizing, very low penetration –Beta: low mass, charged, highly ionizing, low penetration –Proton: high mass, charged, highly ionizing, low penetration –Neutron: high mass, no charge, less ionizing, unusual penetration properties In all cases, penetration depends on energy.

Particulate Radiation Medical uses: –Alpha: Radiotherapy –Beta: X-ray production, PET imaging, Radiotherapy –Proton: Radiotherapy –Neutron: Radiotherapy So we are primarily interested in electrons and positrons for imaging.

Energetic Electron Energy Transfer How electrons lose energy to a medium: –Collisional transfer: Interaction between particle and orbital electrons High-energy: Ionization Low-energy: Heat Energetic electron loses kinetic energy –Radiative Transfer: Energy transfer results in production of X-ray Characteristic X-rays Bremsstrahlung radiation

Energetic electron energy transfer

Energy loss rate vs. electron energy in water and lead therapy diagnostic Pb

Characteristic X-rays Electron moves from higher energy level to a lower energy level. Since the orbital energy levels are well defined for individual elements, each element has its own characteristic transitions. –These are very specific energy levels. Usually, it is the transitions into the K shell that are important.

Characteristic X-rays

Bremsstrahlung “Braking radiation” The effect of charge-charge interaction between an energetic electron and an atomic nucleus The electron slows and releases energy in the form of an X-ray photon. Bremsstrahlung X-rays may have any energy up to the energy of the incident electrons.

“White” bremsstrahlung x-rays Filtered x-rays

Bremsstrahlung production Efficiency = 9 x Z (atomic number) V (voltage) (This is an approximation.) Efficiency: the ratio of the Bremsstrahlung x-ray energy to the incident electron energy. The remaining portion of the electron energy (1 - Efficiency) is converted into heat in the x-ray target. Anode heating is a major issue in x-ray tubes. Exercise: Calculate the efficiency for x-ray production for 100keV electron beams on tungsten (Z = 74).

Exercises: What is the rest energy of an electron? (mass = 9.11 x g) What is the rest energy of a proton? (mass = 1.67 x g) Electron energy, mass and velocity Kinetic energy (KE)

EM Radiation Electromagnetic radiation is considered in the form of photons. –No charge, no mass –The wavelengths of interest are much smaller than the scales of typical interactions, so we are safe to treat this radiation as “particles” rather than “waves”.

EM Radiation X-rays versus gamma-rays (or gamma particles) –Physically, they are the same thing. –X-rays: Produced by energetic electrons striking a material Man-made Secondary effects –Gamma-rays: Produced by radioactive decay of materials

Radiation

Electromagnetic (EM) radiation Energy (keV): 1 eV = x J Frequency (Hz): E = hf (Hz) Planck Constant: h = x erg-second = x eV-s Wavelength ( ): E (keV)= 1.24 / (nm)

(Physical Principles of Medical Imaging by Perry Sprawls)

X-ray production process in imaging and therapy systems involves both particulate and EM types of radiation 1)Free electron production (temporal res. control) Electrons are “pulled” out of filament (thermionic or field emission). 1)Electron acceleration Electron energy under voltage (E = eV) 3)Electron bombards anode to produce Bremsstrahlung x-rays (spatial res. Control- focal spot size) Once x-rays are generated, they are shaped and controlled to suit the need of the specific application.

EM Radiation Interactions with matter –Rayleigh scatter –Photoelectric effect –Compton scatter –Pair production; positron annihilation More next time

Radioisotopes Gamma photons are given off as unstable or metastable isotopes try to go to a more stable atomic state. The nuclear transitions are well defined for a given isotope. –Specific energies are emitted –Sometimes, there are multiple transition paths; thus, multiple energies.

Atomic Structure Atomic structure –Nucleus (Z protons and N neutrons) –Z orbital electrons Atomic number: Z (element) Mass number: A = Z+ N (total number of nucleons) Symbols element Atomic number mass number

Radionuclide Definition: Certain natural and man-made atoms with unstable nucleus that can undergo spontaneous breakup or decay and, in the process, emit alpha, beta, or gamma radiation. Naturally occurring radionuclides (U-238, Ra-226, Rn-222) Man-made radionuclides (isotope) –All radionuclides for diagnostics and therapy are man-made. Therapy: I-125, Ir-192, Cs-137, Co-60, etc. Diagnostic: Ga-67, Tc-99, I-131, C-11, O-15, etc.

Nucleus instability and decay A nucleus with excess energy is at an excited state. It will release the energy and go to the ground (energy) stable state eventually. N/P (number of neutrons over protons) ratio is a good indicator of nucleus stability. For low (<15) Z atoms, the stable N/P ratio is 1.0 and it increases to ~1.5 for high Z atoms. N/P =1 H He Li Be B C N O F Ne Na Mg Al Si P S

Nuclear transitions There are several ways an unstable nucleus can decay: Isotopic transition (mother and daughter nuclei have the same number of protons) – Lose a neutron Isobaric transition (different number of protons but same number of nucleons (N+P)) – Exchange proton and neutron Isomeric transition (different energy levels) – Lose energy from nucleus Isotonic transition (have the same number of neutrons) – Lose a proton Isotopes, isobars, isomers, and isotones.

Examples of isobars, isotones, and isotopes Products of radioactive decay: Beta particle (electron) Isobaric transition Positron Isobaric transition Electron capture Isobaric transition Gamma ray Isomeric transition Alpha particle Secondary decay products: Characteristic x-rays Auger electrons Isotones

Examples

Nuclear Transitions in Medicine Isobaric (exchange neutron and proton) –  - emission (high N/P ratio) Neutron > proton +  - + neutrino –  + emission (low N/P ratio) Proton > neutron +  + + neutrino –Electron capture (low N/P ratio) Proton + K-shell e- > neutron + gamma Isomeric (lose energy from nucleus) –Gamma emission –Internal conversion Atom ionizes itself;  - emitted

Composite diagram of nuclear transitions Stable N/P K shell High N/P Low N/P positron beta Electron capture Gamma Internal conversion electron Auger X-rays Z, atomic number energy

Activity (A) A measure of the rate a radioactive nucleus decays. Activity is the change of total number of original radioactive nuclei (N) in a given time (dt): Question: If two different gamma-ray emitting radionuclides have the same radioactivity, do they give the same photon flux? (Flux = photons/area/time)

Activity Units: curie (Ci) and becquerel (Bq) Ci = 3.7 x dps Bq = 1 dps dps: disintegrations per second Curie is a very large quantity of radioactivity. Commonly used activity level is ~ 100 mCi for therapy and ~ mCi for diagnostics. The SI unit is becquerel and 1mCi = 37M Bq.

Decay constant Decay constant  is the fraction of radionuclei decayed per time. F   min --> 0.63% per min I   day --> 1.17% per day

Half life T 1/2 T 1/2 : time for 50% of the original radionuclides to decay. N remaining = N original /2 n (n: number of half lives elapsed)

Radioactive Decay Activity remaining for 24 hours for common SPECT (99m-Tc) and PET (18-F) isotopes

Measure of Radiation Radiation dose Definition: ionization energy absorbed per unit mass. Dose (Gy) = Energy (J)/ Mass (kg) Radiation Exposure Definition: ionization charge collected per unit mass of air. Exposure (R) = charge (Q)/Mass (kg)| air Roughly speaking: Dose (cGy) ~ Exposure (R)