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      Water-equivalent plastic scintillation detectors for high-energy beam dosimetry: II. Properties and measurements.

      Physics in medicine and biology
      Fiber Optic Technology, Humans, Plastics, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy, High-Energy, instrumentation, Scintillation Counting, Water

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          Abstract

          The properties of a new scintillation detector system for use in dosimetry of high-energy beams in radiotherapy have been measured. The most important properties of these detectors are their hgh spatial resolution and their nearly water-equivalence. Measurements have shown that they have excellent reproducibility and stability, and a linear response versus dose-rate. It is also shown that they have better spatial resolution than ionization chambers and have much less energy or depth dependence in electron fields due to the removal of the influence of the polarization effect. Dose distributions in water, using miniature plastic scintillation detectors, have been measured for different high-energy photon and electron beams.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          1438555
          10.1088/0031-9155/37/10/007

          Chemistry
          Fiber Optic Technology,Humans,Plastics,Radiotherapy Dosage,Radiotherapy, High-Energy,instrumentation,Scintillation Counting,Water

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