Microbeam radiosurgery (MBRS), also referred to as microbeam radiation therapy (MRT), was tested at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF). The left tibiofibular thigh of a mouse bearing a subcutaneously (sc) implanted mouse model (SCCVII) of aggressive human squamous-cell carcinoma was irradiated in two orthogonal exposures with or without a 16 mm aluminium filter through a multislit collimator (MSC) by arrays of nearly parallel microbeams spaced 200 microm on centre (oc). The peak skin-entrance dose from each exposure was 442 Gy, 625 Gy, or 884 Gy from 35 microm wide beams or 442 Gy from 70 microm wide beams. The 442/35, 625/35, 884/35 and 442/70 MBRSs yielded 25 day, 29 day, 37 day and 35 day median survival times (MST) (post-irradiation), respectively, exceeding the 20 day MST from 35 Gy-irradiation of SCCVIIs with a seamless 100 kVp X-ray beam.
These data suggest that the combination of MRT+GMIMPR might be better than MRT only for unifocal CNS tumors, particularly in infants and young children.
A plan is being developed for the conversion of the NIST research reactor (NBSR) from high-enriched uranium (HEU) fuel to low-enriched uranium (LEU) fuel. Previously, the design of the LEU fuel had been determined in order to provide the users of the NBSR with the same cycle length as exists for the current HEU fueled reactor. The fuel composition at different points within an equilibrium fuel cycle had also been determined. In the present study, neutronics parameters have been calculated for these times in the fuel cycle for both the existing HEU and the proposed LEU equilibrium cores. The results showed differences between the HEU and LEU cores that would not lead to any significant changes in the safety analysis for the converted core. In general the changes were reasonable except that the figure-of-merit for neutrons that can be used by experimentalists shows there will be a 10% reduction in performance. The calculations included kinetics parameters, reactivity coefficients, reactivity worths of control elements and abnormal configurations, and power distributions.
Secondary-electron yields were investigated for 28-MeV protons, 126-MeV oxygen-ions, and 182-MeV gold ions incident on 304 stainless-steel surfaces. The dependence on the incidence angle was studied in detail, and a system was developed which allows accurate measurements to be performed over a wide angular range extending to nearly grazing collisions. Electron yield estimates of interest for future accelerator applications are developed for 1-GeV protons, and the possible mitigation of deleterious effects by using serrated rather than flat surfaces is analyzed.
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