Literature DB >> 12033224

Measurement of the energy spectrum of cosmic-ray induced neutrons aboard an ER-2 high-altitude airplane.

P Goldhagen1, M Reginatto, T Kniss, J W Wilson, R C Singleterry, I W Jones, W Van Steveninck.   

Abstract

Crews working on present-day jet aircraft are a large occupationally exposed group with a relatively high average effective dose from galactic cosmic radiation. Crews of future high-speed commercial aircraft flying at higher altitudes would be even more exposed. To help reduce the significant uncertainties in calculations of such exposures, the atmospheric ionizing radiation (AIR) project, an international collaboration of 15 laboratories, made simultaneous radiation measurements with 14 instruments on five flights of a NASA ER-2 high-altitude aircraft. The primary AIR instrument was a highly sensitive extended-energy multisphere neutron spectrometer with lead and steel shells placed within the moderators of two of its 14 detectors to enhance response at high energies. Detector responses were calculated for neutrons and charged hadrons at energies up to 100 GeV using MCNPX. Neutron spectra were unfolded from the measured count rates using the new MAXED code. We have measured the cosmic-ray neutron spectrum (thermal to >10 GeV), total neutron fluence rate, and neutron effective dose and dose equivalent rates and their dependence on altitude and geomagnetic cutoff. The measured cosmic-ray neutron spectra have almost no thermal neutrons, a large "evaporation" peak near 1 MeV and a second broad peak near 100 MeV which contributes about 69% of the neutron effective dose. At high altitude, geomagnetic latitude has very little effect on the shape of the spectrum, but it is the dominant variable affecting neutron fluence rate, which was eight times higher at the northernmost measurement location than it was at the southernmost. The shape of the spectrum varied only slightly with altitude from 21 km down to 12 km (56-201 g cm-2 atmospheric depth), but was significantly different on the ground. In all cases, ambient dose equivalent was greater than effective dose for cosmic-ray neutrons. c2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12033224     DOI: 10.1016/s0168-9002(01)01386-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucl Instrum Methods Phys Res A        ISSN: 0168-9002            Impact factor:   1.455


  8 in total

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Review 4.  Advances in functional X-ray imaging techniques and contrast agents.

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Authors:  S I Zaichkina; O M Rozanova; G F Aptikaeva; A Kh Akhmadieva; E N Smirnova; S P Romanchenko; N P Sirota; O A Vachrusheva; V N Peleshko
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7.  The Impact of Dose Rate on DNA Double-Strand Break Formation and Repair in Human Lymphocytes Exposed to Fast Neutron Irradiation.

Authors:  Shankari Nair; Monique Engelbrecht; Xanthene Miles; Roya Ndimba; Randall Fisher; Peter du Plessis; Julie Bolcaen; Jaime Nieto-Camero; Evan de Kock; Charlot Vandevoorde
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-10-28       Impact factor: 5.923

8.  Assessment of background radiation levels in the southeast of Iran.

Authors:  Mohammad Haghparast; Mahdieh Afkhami Ardekani; Mahmoud Navaser; Soheila Refahi; Milad Najafzadeh; Hamed Ghaffari; Mahboubeh Masoumbeigi
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  8 in total

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