units The sievert is used in external radiation protection for
equivalent dose (the external-source, whole-body exposure effects, in a uniform field), and
effective dose (which depends on the body parts irradiated). These dose quantities are weighted averages of absorbed dose designed to be representative of the
stochastic health effects of radiation, and use of the sievert implies that appropriate
weighting factors have been applied to the absorbed dose measurement or calculation (expressed in grays). The ICRP calculation provides two weighting factors to enable the calculation of protection quantities. : 1. The radiation factor
WR, which is specific for radiation type
R – This is used in calculating the equivalent dose
HT which can be for the whole body or for individual organs. : 2. The tissue weighting factor
WT, which is specific for tissue type T being irradiated. This is used with
WR to calculate the contributory organ doses to arrive at an effective dose
E for non-uniform irradiation. When a whole body is irradiated uniformly only the radiation weighting factor
WR is used, and the effective dose equals the whole body equivalent dose. But if the irradiation of a body is partial or non-uniform the tissue factor
WT is used to calculate dose to each organ or tissue. These are then summed to obtain the effective dose. In the case of uniform irradiation of the human body, these summate to 1, but in the case of partial or non-uniform irradiation, they will summate to a lower value depending on the organs concerned; reflecting the lower overall health effect. The calculation process is shown on the accompanying diagram. This approach calculates the biological risk contribution to the whole body, taking into account complete or partial irradiation, and the radiation type or types. The values of these weighting factors are conservatively chosen to be greater than the bulk of experimental values observed for the most sensitive cell types, based on averages of those obtained for the human population.
Radiation type weighting factor WR Since different radiation types have different biological effects for the same deposited energy, a corrective
radiation weighting factor WR, which is dependent on the radiation type and on the target tissue, is applied to convert the absorbed dose measured in the unit gray to determine the equivalent dose. The result is given the unit sievert. The equivalent dose is calculated by multiplying the absorbed energy, averaged by mass over an organ or tissue of interest, by a radiation weighting factor appropriate to the type and energy of radiation. To obtain the equivalent dose for a mix of radiation types and energies, a sum is taken over all types of radiation energy dose. H_T = \sum_R W_R \cdot D_{T,R}, where : is the equivalent dose absorbed by tissue
T, : is the absorbed dose in tissue
T by radiation type
R and : is the radiation weighting factor defined by regulation. Thus for example, an absorbed dose of 1 Gy by alpha particles will lead to an equivalent dose of 20 Sv. This may seem to be a paradox. It implies that the energy of the incident radiation field in
joules has increased by a factor of 20, thereby violating the laws of
conservation of energy. However, this is not the case. The sievert is used only to convey the fact that a gray of absorbed alpha particles would cause twenty times the biological effect of a gray of absorbed x-rays. It is this biological component that is being expressed when using sieverts rather than the actual energy delivered by the incident absorbed radiation.
Tissue type weighting factor WT The second weighting factor is the tissue factor
WT, but it is used only if there has been non-uniform irradiation of a body. If the body has been subject to uniform irradiation, the effective dose equals the whole body equivalent dose, and only the radiation weighting factor
WR is used. But if there is partial or non-uniform body irradiation the calculation must take account of the individual organ doses received, because the sensitivity of each organ to irradiation depends on their tissue type. This summed dose from only those organs concerned gives the effective dose for the whole body. The tissue weighting factor is used to calculate those individual organ dose contributions. The ICRP values for
WT are given in the table shown here. The article on
effective dose gives the method of calculation. The absorbed dose is first corrected for the radiation type to give the equivalent dose, and then corrected for the tissue receiving the radiation. Some tissues like bone marrow are particularly sensitive to radiation, so they are given a weighting factor that is disproportionally large relative to the fraction of body mass they represent. Other tissues like the hard bone surface are particularly insensitive to radiation and are assigned a disproportionally low weighting factor. In summary, the sum of tissue-weighted doses to each irradiated organ or tissue of the body adds up to the effective dose for the body. The use of effective dose enables comparisons of overall dose received regardless of the extent of body irradiation. ==Operational quantities==