Determinations of H*(10) and its dose components onboard aircraft

Archive ouverte

Lindborg, L. | Beck, P. | Bottolier-Depois, J.F. | Latocha, M. | Lillhök, J. | Rollet, S. | Roos, H. | Roth, J. | Schraube, H. | Spurny, F. | Stehno, G. | Trompier, F. | Wissmann, F.

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

International audience. Aircrew is in general receiving a higher average annual dose than other occupationally exposed personnel, and about half of the effective dose is deposited by high-LET neutron secondaries. A recent investigation of the cancer incidence following the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki has put forward the possibility that the relative biological efficiency for neutrons could be underestimated. If so, the effective dose to aircrew from this component would increase and the estimation of this component will become even more important. Different ambient dose equivalent measurement techniques and calculation methods have recently been compared on a dedicated flight. The experimental results are compared with calculations made with the codes EPCARD 3.2 and an updated version of FLUKA and different galactic proton spectra. The aircraft circulated within the target areas at two constant altitudes with a flight route variation of only about 1° in longitude and latitude to reduce the influence from variations in atmospheric and geomagnetic shielding. The instrumentation consisted of tissue-equivalent proportional counters (TEPC) and a silicon diode spectrometer. Measurements were performed for 2 h to reduce the statistical uncertainties in the results. The TEPCs were evaluated either according to single-event analysis techniques or the variance-covariance method. Besides the total ambient dose equivalent, the instruments can be evaluated to reveal the low- and high-LET components. The EPCARD and FLUKA simulations can determine the contribution from each type of particle directly. The ratio between the calculated and the measured average value of the ambient dose equivalent rate was 1.00 ± 0.08 with all instruments included for EPCARD and 0.97 ± 0.07 when FLUKA was used. The measured high-LET component and the calculated neutron component are not quite identical, but should be similar. The agreement was always within 20%. The high-LET component contributed with about 57% at N57 E8 and 48% at N42 E12. ©The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Exposure of aircraft crew to cosmic radiation: On-board intercomparison of various dosemeters

Archive ouverte | Bottollier-Depois, J.-F. | CCSD

International audience. Owing to their professional activity, flight crews may receive a dose of some millisieverts within a year; airline passengers may also be concerned. The effective dose is to be estimated usin...

Comparison of codes assessing galactic cosmic radiation exposure of aircraft crew

Archive ouverte | Bottollier-Depois, J.F. | CCSD

International audience. The assessment of the exposure to cosmic radiation onboard aircraft is one of the preoccupations of bodies responsible for radiation protection. Cosmic particle flux is significantly higher o...

Réseau Caspa - Guideline pour les projets de métrologie participative

Archive ouverte | Arruabarrena, Béa | CCSD

Ce guideline est dédié à la mise en œuvre d’une démarche de recherche basée sur les métrologies participatives (dispositifs de citizen science mobilisant des capteurs environnementaux). Il a été conçu par une équipe de recherche d...

Chargement des enrichissements...