Difference between revisions of "Absorbed, Equivalent, and Effective Dose"

From ICRPaedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 49: Line 49:
 
''' </span>
 
''' </span>
 
|-
 
|-
|<span style="font-size=100%"> Effective dose is calculated for the whole body. It is sometimes called whole-body dose.
+
|<span style="font-size=100%"> Effective dose is calculated for the whole body.
  
 
</span>
 
</span>

Latest revision as of 21:54, 21 November 2019


Radiation dose is a measure of the amount of exposure to radiation. There are three kinds of dose in radiological protection. Absorbed dose is a measureable, physical quantity, while equivalent dose and effective dose are specifically for radiological protection purposes.


Effective dose in particular is a central feature of radiological protection. It sums up any number of different exposures into a single number that reflects, in a general way, the overall risk. The concept may be complex, but it makes radiological protection practical to implement.

More Details

[see more/less]


Quotes from ICRP Publications

[see more/less]


Blue arrow.jpg Read on to learn about Dose limits

See Also