Units of radiation dose

Roentgen (unit)

The roentgen or röntgen (/ˈrɜːntɡən/; symbol R) is a legacy unit of measurement for the exposure of X-rays and gamma rays, and is defined as the electric charge freed by such radiation in a specified volume of air divided by the mass of that air (statcoulomb per kilogram).In 1928, it was adopted as the first international measurement quantity for ionising radiation to be defined for radiation protection, as it was then the most easily replicated method of measuring air ionization by using ion chambers. It is named after the German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen, who discovered X-rays and was awarded the first Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery. However, although this was a major step forward in standardising radiation measurement, the roentgen has the disadvantage that it is only a measure of air ionisation, and not a direct measure of radiation absorption in other materials, such as different forms of human tissue. For instance, one roentgen deposits 0.00877 grays (0.877 rads) of absorbed dose in dry air, or 0.0096 Gy (0.96 rad) in soft tissue. One roentgen of X-rays may deposit anywhere from 0.01 to 0.04 Gy (1.0 to 4.0 rad) in bone depending on the beam energy. As the science of radiation dosimetry developed, it was realised that the ionising effect, and hence tissue damage, was linked to the energy absorbed, not just radiation exposure. Consequently new radiometric units for radiation protection were defined which took this into account. In 1953 the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU) recommended the rad, equal to 100 erg/g, as the unit of measure of the new radiation quantity absorbed dose. The rad was expressed in coherent cgs units.In 1975 the unit gray was named as the SI unit of absorbed dose. One gray is equal to 1 J/kg (i.e. 100 rad). Additionally, a new quantity, kerma, was defined for air ionisation as the exposure for instrument calibration, and from this the absorbed dose can be calculated using known coefficients for specific target materials. Today, for radiation protection, the modern units, absorbed dose for energy absorption and the equivalent dose (sievert) for stochastic effect, are overwhelmingly used, and the roentgen is rarely used. The International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM) has never accepted the use of the roentgen. The roentgen has been redefined over the years. It was last defined by the U.S.'s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in 1998 as 2.58×10−4 C/kg, with a recommendation that the definition be given in every document where the roentgen is used. (Wikipedia).

Roentgen (unit)
Video thumbnail

Lec 16 | MIT 3.091SC Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, Fall 2010

Lecture 16: Crystallographic Notation & X-Rays Instructor: Donald Sadoway View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/3-091SCF10 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu

From playlist MIT 3.091SC Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, Fall 2010

Video thumbnail

30. Radiation Dose, Dosimetry, and Background Radiation

MIT 22.01 Introduction to Nuclear Engineering and Ionizing Radiation, Fall 2016 Instructor: Michael Short View the complete course: https://ocw.mit.edu/22-01F16 YouTube Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUl4u3cNGP61FVzAxBP09w2FMQgknTOqu Units of radiation dose to biological

From playlist MIT 22.01 Introduction to Nuclear Engineering and Ionizing Radiation, Fall 2016

Video thumbnail

Lec 16 | MIT 3.091 Introduction to Solid State Chemistry

Characterization of Atomic Structure: The Generation of X-rays and Moseley's Law View the complete course at: http://ocw.mit.edu/3-091F04 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu

From playlist MIT 3.091 Introduction to Solid State Chemistry, Fall 2004

Video thumbnail

How the shy Roentgen created the X-ray Craze

Within weeks of Roentgen's discovery of the x-ray, the world went, basically, x-ray crazy. This is that wild story. My lovely brother-in-law translated the original newspaper account from Old German if you would like to read it (it is amazingly prescient): https://kathylovesphysics.

From playlist History of Science (in order)

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 4a: Fibonacci Numbers - Review Of The Eigenvalue Decomposition

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Wilhelm Roentgen Biography: How & Why X-rays were Discovered

Wilhelm Roentgen discovered x-rays in 1895, but who was he, why did he discover x-rays and how did a dirty picture almost derail his career? Find out in this quick biography of a deeply earnest and hugely influential scientist. By the way, I know that his last name is properly spelled R

From playlist Nobel Prize History

Video thumbnail

The Only Radiation Units You Need to Know

In order to have a meaningful conversation about the dangers of radiation exposure, it’s important to be clear about just how much radiation we are dealing with. Unfortunately, the units we use are kind of a mess… but SciShow is here with the only two you need to know. Hosted by: Michael

From playlist Uploads

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra 21g: Euler Angles and a Short Tribute to Leonhard Euler

https://bit.ly/PavelPatreon https://lem.ma/LA - Linear Algebra on Lemma http://bit.ly/ITCYTNew - Dr. Grinfeld's Tensor Calculus textbook https://lem.ma/prep - Complete SAT Math Prep

From playlist Part 3 Linear Algebra: Linear Transformations

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 3d: Easy Eigenvalues - Linearly Dependent Columns

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 1a: Matrix Representation of a Linear Transformation

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

How do X-Rays Work?

Patreon: patreon.com/ConcerningReality FB: facebook.com/ConcerningReality/ Chances are you've had an X-ray at some point in your life, but did you know this life-saving technology was actually invented by accident? German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen discovered the technology while he was d

From playlist Concerning Questions

Video thumbnail

Roentgenium (version 1) - Periodic Table of Videos

Newer Rg video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTq1hzhCF0g Roentgenium can be bit of a mouthful. More links in description below ↓↓↓ Support Periodic Videos on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/periodicvideos A video on every element: http://bit.ly/118elements More at http://www.perio

From playlist With Portuguese subtitles (Português) - Periodic Videos

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 4b: Fibonacci Numbers As A Matrix Product

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 4c: Fibonacci Numbers - The Derivation Of The Formula

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra 19r: Translations, or How to Represent Nonlinear Transformations by Matrix Products

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Part 3 Linear Algebra: Linear Transformations

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 3g: Easy Eigenvalues - The Determinant

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Linear Algebra Vignette 2d: RREF And The Inverse Matrix

This course is on Lemma: http://lem.ma Lemma looking for developers: http://lem.ma/jobs Other than http://lem.ma, I recommend Strang http://bit.ly/StrangYT, Gelfand http://bit.ly/GelfandYT, and my short book of essays http://bit.ly/HALAYT Questions and comments below will be prompt

From playlist Linear Algebra Vignettes

Video thumbnail

Physics 3C. Lecture 25.

UCI Physics 3C: Basic Physics III (Fall 2013) Lec 25. Basic Physics III View the complete course: http://ocw.uci.edu/courses/physics_3c_basic_physics_iii.html Instructor: Michael Smy, Ph.D. License: Creative Commons CC-BY-SA Terms of Use: http://ocw.uci.edu/info More courses at http://ocw

From playlist Physics 3C: Basic Physics III

Video thumbnail

How X-rays see through your skin - Ge Wang

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-x-rays-see-through-your-skin-ge-wang Originally discovered by accident, X-rays are now used about 100 million times a year in clinics around the world. How do these magic eyes work? Ge Wang details the history and mechanics of the X-ray mach

From playlist New TED-Ed Originals

Video thumbnail

Math 060 Linear Algebra 01 090514: Systems of Linear Equations; Matrices

1.1 Introduction: systems of linear equations. "Legal" operations (that result in equivalent systems, i.e., systems with the same solution set). Row echelon form, lead variables, free variables. Definition of a matrix; matrix addition, scalar multiplication, additive inverses.

From playlist Course 4: Linear Algebra

Related pages

Ampere | Second | Electric charge | Cubic centimetre | Curie (unit) | Gray (unit) | Kilogram | Rad (unit) | Statcoulomb | SI base unit | Roentgen equivalent man | European units of measurement directives | Orders of magnitude (radiation) | Volume | Becquerel | Sievert