Abstract

PurposeTo introduce a new method of deriving a virtual source model (VSM) of a linear accelerator photon beam from a phase space file (PSF) for Monte Carlo (MC) dose calculation.Materials and methodsA PSF of a 6 MV photon beam was generated by simulating the interactions of primary electrons with the relevant geometries of a Synergy linear accelerator (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden) and recording the particles that reach a plane 16 cm downstream the electron source. Probability distribution functions (PDFs) for particle positions and energies were derived from the analysis of the PSF. These PDFs were implemented in the VSM using inverse transform sampling. To model particle directions, the phase space plane was divided into a regular square grid. Each element of the grid corresponds to an area of 1 mm2 in the phase space plane. The average direction cosines, Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC) between photon energies and their direction cosines, as well as the PCC between the direction cosines were calculated for each grid element. Weighted polynomial surfaces were then fitted to these 2D data. The weights are used to correct for heteroscedasticity across the phase space bins. The directions of the particles created by the VSM were calculated from these fitted functions. The VSM was validated against the PSF by comparing the doses calculated by the two methods for different square field sizes. The comparisons were performed with profile and gamma analyses.ResultsThe doses calculated with the PSF and VSM agree to within 3% /1 mm (>95% pixel pass rate) for the evaluated fields.ConclusionA new method of deriving a virtual photon source model of a linear accelerator from a PSF file for MC dose calculation was developed. Validation results show that the doses calculated with the VSM and the PSF agree to within 3% /1 mm.

Highlights

  • Monte Carlo (MC) dose calculation is considered as the most accurate method of estimating the energy deposited to a medium by ionizing radiation [1]

  • The doses calculated with the phase space file (PSF) and virtual source model (VSM) agree to within 3% /1 mm (>95% pixel pass rate) for the evaluated fields

  • Validation results show that the doses calculated with the VSM and the PSF agree to within 3% /1 mm

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Monte Carlo (MC) dose calculation is considered as the most accurate method of estimating the energy deposited to a medium by ionizing radiation [1]. MC source models on the other hand contain instructions to create (any desired number of) particles whose properties are a good approximation of those generated by the modeled device or of the information stored in a PSF. They are not limited by the latent variance inherent in PSFs due to their finite size and particle recycling, requires only a few kilobytes or storage space and are the most efficient method of generating particles for MC dose calculation [2, 10, 11, 17, 18]. PSF-derived source models have been used extensively for modeling megavoltage photon beams [7,8,9, 15, 19]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call