Difference between revisions of "Air-kerma rate constant"

From ICRPaedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
Line 3: Line 3:
  
  
(Adapted from [http://www.icrp.org/publication.asp?id=ICRP%20Publication%20107 ICRP ''Publication 107''])
+
([[ICRP Publication 107]])
  
 
''[[ICRP Glossary]] entry - 22 February 2019''
 
''[[ICRP Glossary]] entry - 22 February 2019''

Revision as of 17:47, 6 June 2019

A characteristic constant for a radionuclide, which is defined in terms of an ideal point source, as [math] \Gamma _\delta =[/math] [math]\frac{\iota^2\ \dot{K}_\delta}{A} [/math] , where [math] \dot{K}_\delta[/math]is the air-kerma rate due to photons (gamma and x rays) of energy greater than δ at a distance [math]\iota[/math] in a vacuum from a point source of the radionuclide of activity A.


(ICRP Publication 107)

ICRP Glossary entry - 22 February 2019

Previous Versions

[see more/less]


ICRP Publication 107 Glossary (Ann. ICRP 38(3), 2008)

This constant, a characteristic of a radionuclide, is defined in terms of an ideal point source, as [math] \Gamma _\delta =[/math] [math]\frac{\iota^2\ \dot{K}_\delta}{A} [/math] , where [math] \dot{K}_\delta[/math] is the air-kerma rate due to photons (gamma and x rays) of energy greater than δ at a distance l in a vacuum from a point source of the radionuclide of activity A.