Difference between revisions of "Absorbed, Equivalent, and Effective Dose"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
− | |||
<span style= "font-size:115%;" style="line-height: 1.1em;"> '''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.''' </span> | <span style= "font-size:115%;" style="line-height: 1.1em;"> '''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.''' </span> |
Revision as of 19:47, 20 June 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]
Read on to learn about Dose limits
See Also
-
ICRP Publication 103 The 2007 Recommendations of ICRP