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Annihilation radiation



Annihilation radiation is a term used in Gamma spectroscopy for the gamma radiation produced when a particle and Antiparticle collide. Most commonly, this refers to 511-keV gamma rays produced by a gamma ray undergoing Pair production [1].

 

Annihilation radiation is not monoenergetic, unlike gamma rays produced by radioactive decay. The production mechanism of annihilation radiation introduces Doppler broadening[2]. The annihilation peak produced in a gamma spectrum by annihilation radiation therefore has a higher full width at half maximum (FWHM) than other gamma rays in spectrum. The difference is more apparent with high resolution detectors, such as Germanium detectors, than with low resolution detectors such as Sodium iodide detectors.

Because of their well-defined energy (511 keV) and characteristic, doppler-broadened shape, annihilation radiation can often be useful in defininig the energy calibration of a gamma ray spectrum.

References

  1. ^ Knoll, G: "Radiation Detection and Measurement", page 12. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2000
  2. ^ Gilmore, G., and Hemmingway, J.: "Practical Gamma Ray Spectrometry", page 13. John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 1995
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Annihilation_radiation". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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