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Spectral reconstruction of high energy photon beams for kernel based dose calculations

Med. Phys. Volume 29, Issue 8, pp. 1789-1796 (August 2002)

Published 24 July 2002
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KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS
  • 87.53.Bn
    Biological and medical physics Ionizing-radiation therapy physics Photon dosimetry: theory and algorithms
  • 29.17.+w
    Experimental methods and instrumentation for elementary-particle and nuclear physics Electrostatic, collective, and linear accelerators
  • 41.50.+h
    Electromagnetism; electron and ion optics X-ray beams and x-ray optics
  • YEAR: 2002

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PUBLICATION DATA

ISSN:
0094-2405 (print)  
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef AAPM
William H. Hinson and J. Daniel Bourland
Department of Radiation Oncology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157
A kernel-based dose computation method with finite-size pencil beams (FSPBs) requires knowledge of the photon spectrum. Published methods of indirect spectral measurements using transmission measurements through beam attenuators use mathematical fits with a large number of parameters and constraints. In this study, we examine a simple strategy for fitting transmission data that models important physical characteristics of photon beams produced in clinical linear accelerators. The shape of an unattenuated bremsstrahlung spectrum is known, varying linearly from a maximum at zero energy to a value of zero at a maximum energy. This unattenuated spectrum is altered primarily by absorption of low energy photons by the flattening filter, causing the true spectrum to roll off to zero at low photon energies. A fitting equation models this behavior and has these advantages over previous methods: (1) the equation describes the shape of a bremsstrahlung spectrum based on physical expectations; and (2) only three fit parameters are required with a single constraint. Results for 4 MV and 6 MV accelerators for central axis and off-axis beams show good agreement with the maximum, average and modal energies for known spectra. Previously published models, representations of beam fluence (energy fluence, dN/dE), experimental methods, and the fitting process are discussed. ©2002 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
History: Received 20 September 2001; accepted 28 May 2002; published 24 July 2002
Permalink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.1494831

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