'Photon Energy' p2 Searchterm 'Photon Energy' found in 1 term [ • ] and 5 definitions [• ], (+ 15 Boolean[• ] resultsResult Pages : •
[Rest Mass Energy] The term refers to the concept of mass-energy equivalence. Einstein proposed that the equivalence of mass and energy is a general principle. E=mc2 E = energy, m = mass, c = the speed of light in a vacuum. c2 is the conversion factor required to convert from units of mass to units of energy. The rest energy of an electron or a positron for example amounts to 0.511 MeV. See also Photon, Photon Energy. ![]() Further Reading: Basics:
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(ACD) Caused by positron decay and positron annihilation two photons are emitted each with an energy of 511 keV in opposite directions. The simultaneous detection of these two photons, by two detectors indicates that a positron annihilation occurred at the line of response (LOR), the path between the two detectors. In PET imaging the annihilation coincidence detection is used to localize the tracer, e.g. F18. See also Positron Decay and Electron Positron Annihilation. •
(EMR) Electromagnetic radiation consists of an electric and a magnetic field component. All EMR travels in a vacuum at the speed of light. EMR is classified related to the frequency//length of the wave. An EM wave consists of discrete packets of energy, named photons (quantization). The energy of the photons depends on the frequency of the wave. Planck-Einstein equation: E = h * f E (energy); h (Planck's constant); f (frequency) EMR types include in order of increasing frequency//decreasing wavelength: radio waves, microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, x-rays and gamma rays. EMR contains energy and momentum, which may be imparted when it interacts with matter. See Gamma Radiation. • •
Air KERMA (Kinetic Energy Released per unit MAss of air) measures the amount of radiation energy in air, unit is J/kg. This include the initial kinetic energy of the primary ionizing particles such as photoelectrons, Compton electrons, positron//negatron pairs from photon radiation, and scattered nuclei from fast neutrons, when for example air is irradiated by an x-ray beam. J/kg (gray) is also the unit of the radiation quantity 'Absorbed Dose'.
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