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Radiation sensitivity
Susceptibility of a material to radiation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Radiation sensitivity is the susceptibility of a material to physical or chemical changes induced by radiation.[1] Examples of radiation sensitive materials are silver chloride, photoresists and biomaterials. Pine trees are more radiation susceptible than birch due to the complexity of the pine DNA in comparison to the birch. Examples of radiation insensitive materials are metals and ionic crystals such as quartz and sapphire. The radiation effect depends on the type of the irradiating particles, their energy, and the number of incident particles per unit volume. Radiation effects can be transient or permanent. The persistence of the radiation effect depends on the stability of the induced physical and chemical change. Physical radiation effects depending on diffusion properties can be thermally annealed whereby the original structure of the material is recovered. Chemical radiation effects usually cannot be recovered.[2][3]
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See also
- Geochronometry- the quantitative measurement of geologic time
- Fission track dating- the radiometric dating technique based on fission fragments
- Radiosensitivity- the susceptibility of living cells, tissues, organs or organisms to the effects of ionizing radiation
References
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