All radiotherapy photon beams are accompanied to some extent by secondary electrons which originate in interactions with source hardware, collimator, shadow tray, and/or the air through which the beam passes. Skin sparing, the shape of the dose buildup curve, and the depth of the dose maximum are all influenced by this electron "contamination." The present study of a 60Co source employs a flat ion chamber to measure dose buildup curves in polystyrene at source distances of 72 to 200 cm, with an open beam or a filter of Lucite, Cu, Pb-loaded acrylic, or Ba- or Pb-loaded nonbrowning glass placed 57 cm from the source, using 5 X 5, 20 X 20, and 35 X 35-cm2 beams as defined at 80 cm SSD. The effect of electron generation in the air was studied by placing a He-gas-filled plastic bag in the beam. A value of about 12% is estimated for the lowest relative dose obtainable with a polystyrene phantom in a "clear" 60Co gamma-ray beam of 1-cm diameter.
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