1. Basic Radiation Physics Concepts and Units of Measurement 2. General Considerations for Accelerator Radiation Fields 3. Prompt Radiation Fields due to Electrons 4. Prompt Radiation Fields due to Protons and Ions 5. Unique Low-Energy Prompt Radiation Phenomena 6. Shielding Materials and Neutron Energy Spectra 7. Induced Radioactivity in Accelerator Components 8. Induced Radioactivity in Environmental Media 9. Radiation Protection Instrumentation at Accelerators
J. Donald Cossairt is a Distinguished Scientist at the Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois. He
received a BA in physics and mathematics from Indiana Central
College (now the University of Indianapolis) (1970) and MS and PhD
degrees in experimental nuclear physics from Indiana University
Bloomington (1972, 1975). His career began with a postdoctoral
appointment in nuclear physics research at the Texas A&M
University Cyclotron Institute, then transitioned to radiation
physics with his move to Fermilab in 1978. He is a member of the
American Physical Society, a Fellow Member of the Health Physics
Society, a Distinguished Emeritus Member of the National Council on
Radiation Protection and Measurements and is a Certified Health
Physicist. Dr. Cossairt has numerous publications in health
physics, nuclear physics, and particle physics. He received a G.
William Morgan Lectureship Award from HPS in 2011. He has been an
instructor of the Radiation Physics, Regulation and Management
course at 14 sessions the U.S. Particle Accelerator School and was
co-academic dean of the Professional Development School of the
Health Physics Society held in Oakland, California in 2008.
Matthew Quinn is the Senior Radiation Safety Officer and Laser
Safety Officer at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
(Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois. He has worked on shielding
assessments, operational radiation safety, radioanalytical
measurements and laser safety. Dr. Quinn is a three-time
instructor of the Radiation Physics, Regulation and Management
course at the U.S. Particle Accelerator School, serves as the Vice
Chair of the Department of Energy EFCOG Laser Safety Task Group,
and is the president-elect of the Accelerator Section of the Health
Physics Society. He received a BS in physics from Loyola
University Chicago (2000), MS and PhD degrees in nuclear physics
from the University of Notre Dame (2005, 2009), and was a
postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Radiation Oncology at
Loyola University Medical Center before joining Fermilab in
2010.
"This book has its origins in a graduate course first taught at the
US Particle Accelerator School in 1993. The objective of the course
and of the book is to address the major radiation physics issues
that are relevant to the wide spectrum of particle accelerators in
use across the world today. To attain this goal, Cossairt and Quinn
(both, Fermi National Accelerator Lab) first develop the
mathematical and physical techniques and concepts associated with
modern particle accelerators, covered in chapters 1 and 2.
Altogether, the authors have attained their stated objective of
providing "a comprehensive reference for accelerator designers,
operators, managers, health and safety staff, and governmental
regulators." The major topics dealt with in detail are prompt
radiation fields due to electrons (chapter 3), prompt radiation
fields due to protons and ions (chapter 4), unique low-energy
radiation phenomena (chapter 5), shielding materials and neutron
energy spectra (chapter 6), and induced radioactivity in
accelerator components and environmental media (chapters 7 and 8).
The ninth and final chapter is particularly useful, covering
radiation protection instrumentation at accelerators. This textbook
is mainly written for people whose work will involve particle
accelerators."
— A. M. Strauss, Vanderbilt University, in CHOICE, January 2020"Don
Cossairt and Matthew Quinn’s recently published book summarises
both basic concepts of the propagation of particles through matter
and fundamental aspects of protecting personnel and environments
against prompt radiation and radioactivity. It constitutes a
compact and comprehensive compendium for radiation-protection
professionals working at accelerators. The book’s content
originates in a course taught by Cossairt, a longstanding and
recently retired radiation expert at Fermi lab, at numerous
sessions of the US Particle Accelerator School (USPAS) since the
early 1990s. It is also available as a Fermilab report, which has
stood the test of time as one of the standard health-physics
handbooks for accelerator facilities for more than 20 years. Quinn,
the book’s co-author, is the laboratory’s radiation-physics
department manager.The book begins with a short overview of the
physical and radiological quantities relevant for
radiation-protection assessments, and briefly sketches the
mechanisms for energy loss and scattering during particle transport
in matter. The introductory part concludes with chapters on the
Boltzmann equation, which in this context describes the transport
of particles through matter, and its solution using Monte Carlo
methods. The following chapters illustrate the radiation fields
that are induced by the interactions of electron, hadron and ion
beams with beamline components. The tools described in these
chapters are parametrised equations and handy rules-of-thumb.
Graphs of representative particle spectra and yields serve for
back-of-the-envelope calculations and describe the fundamental
characteristics of radiation fields.The second half of the book
deals with the practical questions encountered in everyday
radiation-protection assessments, such as the selection of the most
efficient shielding material for a given radiation field, the
energy spectra to be expected outside of the shielding, where
personnel might be present, and lists of the radiologically
relevant nuclides that are typically produced around accelerators.
It also provides a compact introduction to activation at
accelerators. The final chapter gives a comprehensive overview of
the radiation-protection instrumentation traditionally used at
accelerators, helping the reader to select the most appropriate
detector for a given radiation field.Some topics have evolved since
the time when the material upon which the book is based was
written. For example, the rules-of-thumb presented in the text are
nowadays mostly used for cross-checking results obtained with much
more powerful and user-friendly Monte Carlo transport programs. The
book gives many tools necessary for obtaining rough but valuable
estimates for setting up simulations and crosschecking
results."—Stefan Roesler, CERN, in CERN Courier, Vol 60 No.5
(September/October 2020)
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