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Inactivation of Cells by Heavy Ion Bombardment

326

Citations

8

References

1971

Year

Abstract

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 ...

References

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