Publication | Closed Access
Inactivation of Cells by Heavy Ion Bombardment
326
Citations
8
References
1971
Year
Emulsion GrainsHeavy Ion BombardmentCytoskeletonEmulsion GrainRadiation BiologyIon ProcessCellular PhysiologyIon ImplantationMembrane TransportIon EmissionRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesMechanobiologyCell DivisionEmulsion TracksCell BiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The tracks formed in nuclear emulsion by energetic heavy ions are made up of grains sensitized by the passage of a single ion. Cells may also be inactivated by the passage of a single ion, in a mode called ion-kill. Emulsion tracks pass from the grain-count regime, where the tracks is a sequence of isolated grains, to the track-width regime, where the track is fully closed and has a cross-sectional area larger than that of an emulsion grain, with increasing values of $z^{2}/\beta ^{2}$ for the charged particle causing the track. The measured value of the inactivation cross section for human kidney cells increases in a similar way. The response of cells is not the same as emulsion grains, because cells may also be inactivated by a gamma-kill mode, involving the cumulative effect of overlapping delta rays from several ions, in addition to the ion-kill mode present in both emulsion and cells. These considerations lead to the equations $P=\sigma /\sigma _{0}=[1-e^{-z^{2}/\kappa ...
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