Showing posts with label Radiation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radiation. Show all posts

Friday, November 12, 2010

OSL Mirrors designed to transport all available Synchrotron radiation power

Optical Surfaces Ltd.
Godstone Road
Kenley
Surrey
CR8 5AA
United Kingdom

Tel: +442086686126
Fax: +442086607743

.

Optical Surfaces Ltd. has received an order from Diamond Light Source Ltd. (Didcot, UK) to supply high precision optical components including a spherical convex mirror and on-axis parabolic mirror. These mirrors will form key components for transporting all the available flux from the Diamond Synchrotron Diagnostic beamline due to go live in March 2011.

The Diamond Light Source is the UK's national synchrotron facility. Located in South Oxfordshire, it generates brilliant beams of light, from infra-red to X-rays, which are used in a wide range of applications, from structural biology through fundamental physics and chemistry to cultural heritage.

View the original article here

Friday, November 05, 2010

Obama's dream of Mars at risk from radiation

To enjoy free access to all high-quality "In depth" content, including topical features, reviews and opinion sign up

Nov 4, 2010

Higher levels of space radiation between 2020 and 2040 could endanger US President Barack Obama's vision for a manned mission to Mars, according to a NASA scientist. The result of two separate solar-activity cycles, which are both predicted to hit their maximum during the period, the increased radiation could cause radiation sickness and an increased cancer risk for any astronauts venturing away from the safety of the Earth's atmosphere.

In April Obama laid out his plans for the future of US space travel: NASA would once again have the technology to carry humans beyond low Earth orbit by 2025, with an asteroid the first likely target. He went on to suggest that astronauts could be orbiting Mars by the mid-2030s. Obama's plans sit alongside the ambitions of other countries to expand their human-spaceflight programmes; the head of China's space agency has recently suggested a manned Chinese Moon mission might be possible by 2025.

However, John Norbury of the NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia suggests there might be an increase in solar activity over this period, possibly hampering the planned missions. In a review paper, published in the journal Advances in Space Research, Norbury brings together several previous studies on solar-activity cycles and applies the findings specifically to the period 2020–2040.

Norbury first looked at the well-established Schwabe cycle, where sunspot numbers reach a peak roughly once every 11 years. The height of this activity, or solar maximum, sees a marked increase in solar flares, as well as coronal mass ejections (CMEs), both mechanisms for flooding the solar system with proton radiation. Norbury predicts the next three Schwabe maxima will occur in 2013, 2024 and 2035, with the later two dates coinciding almost exactly with America and China's space-faring aspirations.

However, the intensity of each solar maximum is also thought to oscillate over a period, called the Gleissberg cycle, of roughly every 80–90 years. A Gleissberg maximum is then, in effect, a double maximum. But pinning down the exact length of this cycle is more difficult because sunspot records stretching back over previous centuries are either incomplete or not as accurate as modern-day data. Instead, information from sunspot records has to be combined with data from other “proxies”.

One such proxy is the carbon-14 record. During a solar minimum, fewer galactic cosmic rays are intercepted by the Sun's lower magnetic activity, and so more bombard the Earth's atmosphere, where they interact with atmospheric nitrogen that then decays into carbon-14. So a decrease in carbon-14 represents an increase in solar-activity levels.

Norbury combined sunspot records with studies of carbon-14 trapped in tree rings, along with nitrate records from ice cores, to suggest the last three Gleissberg maxima occurred in 1790, 1870 and 1950. Such a pattern implies the next Gleissberg maximum should fall between 2020 and 2040, meaning more frequent solar events and a higher chance of those leaving low Earth orbit being irradiated, something the short NASA Apollo missions were fortunate to avoid.

“The Moon missions were just blind lucky,” explains Lewis Dartnell, an astrobiologist at University College, London. “The astronauts would have experienced radiation sickness and a higher risk of future cancer if they'd been hit,” he adds. However, crews travelling to an asteroid or Mars, journeys that take months rather than days, are subject to a much greater risk. “The worse-case scenario is that if you radiate a crew sufficiently, they'd all succumb to radiation sickness within a few days and essentially vomit and diarrhoea themselves to death within an enclosed capsule,” Dartnell told physicsworld.com.

Potentially there are ways to protect astronauts, including using polythene and the spacecraft's water supply as radiation shielding, but there is a problem. “The particles are scattered by hitting nuclei within the water or polythene; it's essentially a nuclear interaction and you end up producing secondary radiation,” Mike Hapgood of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK explains. Hapgood and colleagues are currently working on an alternative technique that involves surrounding the spacecraft with a plasma shield to deflect incoming protons without creating secondary radiation. However, with the idea still in its infancy, Hapgood believes the chances of it being ready in time for Obama's 2030s Mars shot “strongly depends on future investment”.

Colin Stuart is a science writer and astronomer based in London

View the original article here

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Culture Shift Needed to Achieve Patient Radiation Safety

Regulators Panellists answer questions during the Senior Regulators Meeting held during the IAEA´s 54th General Conference.

Say It!

Medical diagnosis and treatment exposes patients to more radiation than ever before; and accidents are by no means limited to developing countries. According to the World Health Organisation, at least 3,000 patients have been affected by radiotherapy incidents and accidents in the last 30 years.

Radiation accidents involving medical uses of radiation have accounted for more acute radiation deaths than any other source, including Chernobyl.

Senior nuclear regulators from around the world met during the fourth day of the IAEA´s 54th General Conference to discuss the pressing issue of medical exposure to radiation and its regulation.

Regulators agreed that in order to solve the problem, not only does there need to be more intensive training for regulators, doctors and technicians dealing with these powerful machines, but there also needs to be consistent application of the IAEA Basic Safety Standards.

Online training is already available on the IAEA website and regional training courses are also organized by technical support organizations.

The regulators said these training opportunities should be developed further and professional organizations should also play an active role and further promote safety culture.

Eliana Amaral, Director of the IAEA Division of Radiation, Transport and Waste Safety said safety would be greatly enhanced if a global incident reporting system could be implemented where doctors and technicians share the circumstances of their mistakes with others in the profession, facilitating learning on a larger scale.

Participants also stated the importance of only ordering procedures involving radiation when they are absolutely necessary.

They also discussed the problem of abandoned radioactive sources from medical applications, noting that they can be controlled if a country has a strong regulatory authority.

See Story Resource for more information.

-- By Sasha Henriques, IAEA Division of Public Information

View the original article here

Analogue Hawking radiation spotted in the lab

To enjoy free access to all high-quality "In depth" content, including topical features, reviews and opinion sign up

Oct 22, 2010

It was one of Stephen Hawking's finest insights: the 1974 prediction that black holes are not totally black, but emit a steady stream of radiation. Experimental confirmation of Hawking radiation would probably bring the 68 year-old British cosmologist a Nobel Prize in Physics. Unfortunately, no-one has been able to detect a black-hole signal because it would be so faint compared with the universe's background radiation.

However Hawking's chances at a Nobel may be rising, thanks to a paper that will soon be published in the journal Physical Review Letters. In this work, Italian physicists describe what many believe to be the first measurement of Hawking radiation from a black hole "analogue" in the lab.

The research has ignited a debate over what truly constitutes Hawking radiation, and whether lab-based evidence could help make Hawking a serious contender for a Nobel prize.

"We don't have any observational evidence from astrophysical black holes regarding the existence of the Hawking effect, and it is extremely unlikely that we will ever have such evidence, so any way of verifying Hawking's prediction is of tremendous importance to the scientific community," says Matt Visser, an expert in gravitational analogues at the Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, who was not involved with the research.

Hawking's theory stemmed from the uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics, which tells us that pairs of particles are continually popping into existence, even in a vacuum. Most of the time these particles annihilate one another almost as soon as they are born, but this would not be true at the edge of a black hole, known as the event horizon, where gravity becomes so strong not even light can escape. If a particle pair is born straddling this point, one particle would have to be sucked in while the other would escape – and this latter one would become Hawking radiation.

Any way of verifying Hawking's prediction is of tremendous importance to the scientific community. Matt Visser, Victoria University of Wellington

Because Hawking radiation is currently impossible to observe for real black holes, physicists have recently been looking to black hole analogues in the lab that can mimic the behaviour of their astrophysical counterparts. One type of analogue employs lasers to simulate an event horizon, because intense light can alter a medium's refractive index, which governs light propagation speed. In simple terms, shining a powerful laser through glass creates a refractive index peak: any other photons in front this peak can travel forward, while those behind and trying to travel forward are slowed to a halt – they are trapped, as in a real black hole.

This is the type of system employed in the latest work by Daniele Faccio and colleagues of the University of Insubria and other Italian institutions. They placed a photon detector and spectrometer at right angles to the direction of the laser beam passing through the glass to catch any photons born spontaneously at the simulated event horizon. Amid noise coming from fluorescent defects in the glass, Faccio's group was able to pick out a signal of photons with wavelengths between 850 and 900 nm. Because there is no known fluorescence emission in this window, the researchers claim, these photons must be Hawking radiation.

Some independent researchers already agree, notably Ulf Leonhardt, a physicist at the University of St Andrews, UK, who pioneered the basis of the experiment two years ago. But others are not so sure.

One problem is that Faccio's group cannot show that the emission is a continuous "black body" spectrum, as an astrophysical black hole's would be – even if they did have an apparatus to make such a thorough measurement, their system is so dispersive that the black-body spectrum would likely be ruined. Another possible issue is that Hawking radiation should be emitted only in the direction of the laser and not perpendicular, although this could be because the strong refractive-index profile bends the light outwards. The question is, do shortcomings like these render the "Hawking radiation" claim untenable?

"This is partially a semantic question," says Renaud Parentani, who specializes in Hawking radiation at Paris-Sud 11 University, France. Parentani believes that no-one has yet defined what should constitute Hawking radiation proper, and that researchers should concentrate on pinpointing which aspects of the phenomenon an experiment has succeeded in demonstrating. "We have to somehow make a list of specific properties that characterize standard Hawking radiation," he adds.

One way to convince doubters might be to measure the photons generated on both sides of the refractive-index peak simultaneously. If they are entangled in the quantum-mechanical sense, this would be solid evidence that they were born together at the horizon. Leonhardt told physicsworld.com that he expects to have results for such an experiment in a year or less.

As for Hawking's chances of a Nobel prize, physicists seem almost unanimous in thinking it's too soon to tell. But with the near-impossibility of making an astrophysical measurement of Hawking radiation, and the official clause that bars posthumous nominations, there is the chance – albeit remote – that the Swedish committee rules laboratory proof of Hawkins's theory sufficient for a decoration. Already, one group based in Canada has found evidence for what it claims is Hawking radiation in a classical, water-based system (see arXiv: 1008.1911), and many other experiments are likely to shore up lab evidence over coming months.

A preprint of the article is available at arXiv: 1009.4634.

Jon Cartwright is a freelance journalist based in Bristol, UK

View the original article here

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Culture Shift Needed to Achieve Patient Radiation Safety

Regulators Panellists answer questions during the Senior Regulators Meeting held during the IAEA´s 54th General Conference.

Say It!

Medical diagnosis and treatment exposes patients to more radiation than ever before; and accidents are by no means limited to developing countries. According to the World Health Organisation, at least 3,000 patients have been affected by radiotherapy incidents and accidents in the last 30 years.

Radiation accidents involving medical uses of radiation have accounted for more acute radiation deaths than any other source, including Chernobyl.

Senior nuclear regulators from around the world met during the fourth day of the IAEA´s 54th General Conference to discuss the pressing issue of medical exposure to radiation and its regulation.

Regulators agreed that in order to solve the problem, not only does there need to be more intensive training for regulators, doctors and technicians dealing with these powerful machines, but there also needs to be consistent application of the IAEA Basic Safety Standards.

Online training is already available on the IAEA website and regional training courses are also organized by technical support organizations.

The regulators said these training opportunities should be developed further and professional organizations should also play an active role and further promote safety culture.

Eliana Amaral, Director of the IAEA Division of Radiation, Transport and Waste Safety said safety would be greatly enhanced if a global incident reporting system could be implemented where doctors and technicians share the circumstances of their mistakes with others in the profession, facilitating learning on a larger scale.

Participants also stated the importance of only ordering procedures involving radiation when they are absolutely necessary.

They also discussed the problem of abandoned radioactive sources from medical applications, noting that they can be controlled if a country has a strong regulatory authority.

See Story Resource for more information.

-- By Sasha Henriques, IAEA Division of Public Information

View the original article here