| Literature DB >> 27798410 |
M C Alves1, D C Galeano, W S Santos, Choonsik Lee, Wesley E Bolch, John G Hunt, A X da Silva, A B Carvalho.
Abstract
Aircraft crew members are occupationally exposed to considerable levels of cosmic radiation at flight altitudes. Since aircrew (pilots and passengers) are in the sitting posture for most of the time during flight, and up to now there has been no data on the effective dose rate calculated for aircrew dosimetry in flight altitude using a sitting phantom, we therefore calculated the effective dose rate using a phantom in the sitting and standing postures in order to compare the influence of the posture on the radiation protection of aircrew members. We found that although the better description of the posture in which the aircrews are exposed, the results of the effective dose rate calculated with the phantom in the sitting posture were very similar to the results of the phantom in the standing posture. In fact we observed only a 1% difference. These findings indicate the adequacy of the use of dose conversion coefficients for the phantom in the standing posture in aircrew dosimetry. We also validated our results comparing the effective dose rate obtained using the standing phantom with values reported in the literature. It was observed that the results presented in this study are in good agreement with other authors (the differences are below 30%) who have measured and calculated effective dose rates using different phantoms.Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27798410 DOI: 10.1088/0952-4746/36/4/885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiol Prot ISSN: 0952-4746 Impact factor: 1.394