Title: Interaction of Electromagnetic Radiation with Matter
1Interaction of Electromagnetic Radiation with
Matter
- N E 162 Lecture 5
- Chapter 8 of Text book
- Jasmina Vujic
2Electromagnetic Radiation
- Its Nature and Properties Dual Nature
- Wave properties ???m??????1/s???c (m/s) ??
- Particle Properties m 0, E h?, p E/c
h?/c h/? - h? 6.63 x 10-34 J s
- Photons Neutral
- cannot steadily lose E as they penetrate matter
- can travel some distance d before interacting
with any atom - Photon can be absorbed - and it disappears,
- Photon can scatter, changing its direction w/ or
w/o E-loss
3Electromagnetic spectrum
4Interaction of Photons with Matter
- Photoelectric Effect
- Compton Scattering
- Pair Production
- Photonuclear Reactions
- In addition, there are two processes with very
small energy transfer - Thomson (elastic) scattering on a free
electron, redirection of low energy photon
without change in energy - Raleigh (coherent) scattering results from
combined (coherent) action of an atom as a whole.
5Photoelectric Effect
- Photoelectron is detected whenever a metal is
illuminated by light of a frequency ??which is
greater than a critical threshold frequency,
irrespective of the intensity of light. - This is in direct conflict with prediction based
on the wave nature of light (if light is
classical wave the electron should absorb E
continuously and at any intensity, it should be
just a matter of time until electron has
sufficient E to escape. Thus there should be no
threshold frequency). - Photoelectric effect could be explained if one
assumed that the E carried by the incoming light
came in discrete amounts. This amount only
depends of ? and not on the intensity I - Einstein in 1905 -gtNobel Prize in 1921
6Photoelectric Effect
Microscopic cross section Linear attenuation
coefficient
Mass attenuation coefficient
7Compton Scattering
8Compton Scattering
- ? 00, h?max h?, Tmin 0
- T 1800, h?min h?????? h??mc2)
- Tmax h????h?2?h?????mc2/h??
9The Klein-Nishina Formula for differential
scattering cross section
- Per electron and per atom
cm²/sr (electron
cm²/electron
cm²/atom
cm-1
Linear attenuation coefficient
10The Klein-Nishina Formula coefficients
- Differential Klein-Nishina energy-transfer cross
section - Differential Klein-Nishina energy-scattering
cross section - The total Compton attenuation coefficient
11Pair Production
Linear attenuation coefficient
12Photonuclear Reactions
- (?,n),(?,p), (?,2n), (?,?), (?,f) etc.
- These are the threshold reactions - photon must
have enough energy to overcome the binding energy
of the ejected nucleon. - Need at least several MeV of photon energy.
- 206Pb(?,n)205Pb, Emin 8 MeV
13Total linear attenuation coefficient
- Total mass attenuation coefficient
??? ???????????????? (cm2/g)
14- Total mass energy transfer coefficient
- g takes into account the Bremsstrahlung
contribution by the electrons freed in each
process
Total Mass Energy-Absorption Coefficient
15(No Transcript)
16Photon attenuation
I(x)
?
I(d)
I0
dI -?I(x)dx I(x)I0 exp(-?x)
d
17Photon with Attenuation
Fluence
Linear attenuation coefficient
18Photon fluence for monoenergetic beam
Collimated beam
Broad beam
19Half-Value layer
http//www.ndt-ed.org
20Point Source
d
r
21Tables of X-Ray Mass Attenuation Coefficients
- http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/c
over.html - Tables of X-Ray Mass Attenuation Coefficients and
Mass Energy-Absorption Coefficients from 1 keV to
20 MeV for Elements Z 1 to 92and 48 Additional
Substances of Dosimetric Interest - J. H. Hubbell and S. M. Seltzer Ionizing
Radiation Division, Physics Laboratory National
Institute of Standards and Technology
Gaithersburg, MD 20899
22Tables of X-Ray Mass Attenuation and Mass Energy
Absorption Coefficients
- Abstract Tables and graphs of the photon mass
attenuation coefficient ??? and the mass
energy-absorption coefficient ?en/? are presented
for all of the elements Z 1 to 92, and for 48
compounds and mixtures of radiological interest.
The tables cover energies of the photon (x-ray,
gamma ray, bremsstrahlung) from 1 keV to 20 MeV.
The ??? values are taken from the current photon
interaction database at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology, and the ?en/? values
are based on the new calculations by Seltzer
described in Radiation Research 136, 147 (1993).
These tables of ??? and ?en/? replace and extend
the tables given by Hubbell in the International
Journal of Applied Radiation and Isotopes 33,
1269 (1982).
23http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/E
lemTab/z08.html
24http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/E
lemTab/z19.html
25http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/E
lemTab/z82.html
26http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/C
omTab/bone.html
27Bone, Cortical (ICRU-44) - Composition
- Z/A 0.51478 I (eV)112.0 ?1.920E00 (g/cm3)
- I - mean excitation energy
- H-1 0.034000
- C-6 0.155000
- N-7 0.042000
- O-8 0.435000
- Na-11 0.001000
- Mg-12 0.002000
- P-15 0.103000
- S-16 0.003000
- Ca-20 0.225000
28http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/C
omTab/tissue.html
29Tissue, Soft (ICRU Four-Component)
- Z/A 0.54975 I(eV)74.9 ? 1.000E00
(g/cm3) - 1 0.101174
- 6 0.111000
- 7 0.026000
- 8 0.761826
30http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/XrayMassCoef/C
omTab/water.html