Table of Contents
References & Edit History Related Topics
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/science/radiation
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

The total path length traversed by a charged particle before it is stopped is called its range. Range is considered to be taken as the sum of the distance traversed over the crooked path (track), whereas the net projection measured along the initial direction of motion is known as the penetration. The difference between range and penetration distances results from scattering encountered by the particle along its path. For heavy charged particles with high initial velocities (those that are appreciable fractions of the speed of light), large-angle scatterings are rare. The corresponding trajectories are straight, and the difference between range and penetration distance is, for most purposes, negligible.

Particle ranges may be obtained by (numerical) integration of a suitable stopping-power formula. Experimentally, range is more easily measured than is stopping power. For heavy particles a critical incident energy in low-atomic-number mediums is 1,000,000 eV divided by the mass of the particle in atomic mass units (amu)—i.e., 1 MeV/amu. For incident energies higher than this critical value, range is usually well-known, and computation agrees with experiment within about 5 percent. In the case of aluminum, which is the best studied material, the accuracy is within about 0.5 percent. For incident energies less than the critical value, however, range calculations are usually uncertain, and agreement with experiment is poor. The range–energy relation is often given adequately as a power law, that range (R) is proportional to energy (E ) raised to some power (n); that is, REn. Protons in the energy interval of a few hundred MeV conform to this kind of relation quite well with the exponent n equal to 1.75. Similar situations exist for other heavy particles. Measurements of range and stopping power are of great importance in particle identification and measurement of their energies. Many experimental data and computations are available for ranges of heavy particles as well as of electrons. The theory by which Bethe derived a stopping number is generally accepted as providing the framework for understanding the variation of range with energy, though in practice the mean excitation potential, I, must be obtained in many cases by experimental curve fitting.

Both stopping power and range should be understood as mean (or average) values over an ensemble of atoms or molecules, because energy loss is a statistical phenomenon. Fluctuations are to be expected. In general, these fluctuations are called straggling, and there are several kinds. Most important among them is the range straggling, which suggests that, for statistical reasons, particles in the same medium have varying path lengths between the same initial and final energies. Bohr showed that for long path lengths the range distribution is approximately Gaussian (a type of relationship between number of occurrences and some other variable). For short path lengths, such as those encountered in penetration of thin films, the emergent particles show a kind of energy straggling called Landau type (for the Soviet physicist Lev Landau). This energy straggling means that the distribution of energy losses is asymmetric when a plot is drawn, with a long tail on the high-energy-loss side. The intermediate case is given by a distribution according to Sergey Ivanovich Vavilov, a Soviet physicist, that must be evaluated numerically. There is evidence in support of all three distributions in their respective regions of validity.

The ionization density (number of ions per unit of path length) produced by a fast charged particle along its track increases as the particle slows down. It eventually reaches a maximum called the Bragg peak close to the end of its trajectory. After that, the ionization density dwindles quickly to insignificance. In fact, the ionization density follows closely the LET. With slowing, the LET at first continues to increase because of the strong velocity denominator in the kinematic factor of the stopping-power formula. At low speeds, however, LET goes through a maximum because of: (1) progressive lowering of charge by electron capture, and (2) the effect of the logarithmic term in the stopping-power formula. In general, the maximum occurs at a few times the Bohr orbital velocity. A curve of ionization density (also called specific ionization or number of ion pairs—negative electron and associated positive ion—formed per unit path length) versus distance in a given medium is called a Bragg curve. The Bragg curve includes straggling within a beam of particles; thus, it differs somewhat from the specific ionization curve for an individual particle in that it has a long tail of low ionization density beyond the mean range. The mean range of radium-C′ alpha particles in air at normal temperature and pressure (NTP), for example, is 7.1 centimetres; the Bragg peak occurs at about 6.3 centimetres from the source with a specific ionization of about 60,000 ion pairs per centimetre.