Exposure dose measurements in megavoltage therapy.

Arguments are presented to show that an ionization chamber in a scattering medium measures the exposure dose at its own center provided it is at a depth sufficient to be on the exponential part of the depth dose curve. The minimum depth for the establishment of electron equilibrium is defined. This is not in accord with the usual assurnption that the equilibrium is established at the depth dose curve maximum, and it is shown that the difference in expcsure dose measured according to the two definitions can be as much as 5% for 20 Mv radiations. At 2 Mv the difference is negligibly small. Use of the N.P.L. roentgen calibration factor leads to a statement about the dose at the center of the hole made in the phantom to receive the chamber. The correction factors to be applied to yield the exposure dose at the center of the filled hole are discussed. For 2 Mv radiation the measured factor, which is independent of field size and chamber depth, is 0.991. (auth)

[1]  M. J. Day The use of the rad in clinical dosage. , 1956, The British journal of radiology.

[2]  D. Greene,et al.  Dosage data for 4,000,000 volt x rays. , 1956, The British journal of radiology.

[3]  T. E. Burlin The measurement of exposure dose for high energy radiation with cavity ionization chambers. , 1959, Physics in medicine and biology.