EFFECTS OF DONTYTIWG RADELATION 8 the done at the center of the body is approsimately 3) perceet higher than ‘would rasuit 9) percent of the dose had been received. the dose rate had fallen w lens than 40 percent of from a given air dose with narres beaa. geometry. Figure 1.4 illustrates the depth dose curve from an experimental mtuation using St> initia! value. Tham tne cop rate ale differed frem the usual constant rate in the f € F i o qT i 8 TOTAL OOBE IM AIM (1) ¢ 1 laberatory. o! 0 10 to 20 l L Ld % tt} a J | L xO TIME AFTER H-HMOUR (HR) Frotec 1ib—T7he accumulation of gemma dose as ae function of time after commcacement of fellout on Rongclap atoil. In addition to the dose rate and energy dif- spherically rented Co” sources with a phantom placed at their center, compared with a conventional bilateral depth dose curve ob- out radiation is signiticantly different from the case, the air dose is usually measured at the 1.23 Geometry of the Exposure ferences the peometry of the exposure to fall- meng tea usual Jaboratory sources. Since fallout radiation is delivered from a planar source the usual narrow beam geometry is not applicable, In such a diffuse 360° tield, the decrease of dose with depth in tissue is less pronounced than that resulting from « bilateral exposure to an X-ray beam because falloff from inv ye square is in effect neutralized. For the sani energy, tained with a single source (4). In the latter point subsequently occupied by the center of the proximal surface of the patient or animal with respect to the source. For the held case, all surfaces are “proximal,” in the sense that the nir dose measured anywhere in the space subsequently occupied by the individual is the same. Lt is this atr dose which ts measured by a field instrument: it dues not bear the same

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