Coordinatore | EUROPEAN ORGANIZATION FOR NUCLEAR RESEARCH
Organization address
address: ROUTE DE MEYRIN CERN contact info |
Nazionalità Coordinatore | Switzerland [CH] |
Totale costo | 3˙922˙553 € |
EC contributo | 3˙922˙553 € |
Programma | FP7-PEOPLE
Specific programme "People" implementing the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community for research, technological development and demonstration activities (2007 to 2013) |
Code Call | FP7-PEOPLE-2011-ITN |
Funding Scheme | MC-ITN |
Anno di inizio | 2012 |
Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) | 2012-02-01 - 2016-01-31 |
# | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
EUROPEAN ORGANIZATION FOR NUCLEAR RESEARCH
Organization address
address: ROUTE DE MEYRIN CERN contact info |
CH (GENEVA 23) | coordinator | 1˙105˙135.43 |
2 |
CESKE VYSOKE UCENI TECHNICKE V PRAZE
Organization address
address: ZIKOVA 4 contact info |
CZ (PRAHA) | participant | 710˙160.00 |
3 |
POLITECNICO DI MILANO
Organization address
address: PIAZZA LEONARDO DA VINCI 32 contact info |
IT (MILANO) | participant | 552˙553.46 |
4 |
IBA DOSIMETRY GMBH
Organization address
address: BAHNHOFSTRASSE 5 contact info |
DE (SCHWARZENBRUCK) | participant | 498˙272.82 |
5 |
MI.AM SRL
Organization address
address: VIA MILANO 131 contact info |
IT (DESIO) | participant | 276˙276.72 |
6 |
AIT Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH
Organization address
address: Donau-City-Strasse 1 contact info |
AT (WIEN) | participant | 271˙717.32 |
7 |
SEIBERSDORF LABOR GMBH
Organization address
address: Forschungszentrum contact info |
AT (Seibersdorf) | participant | 271˙717.32 |
8 |
JABLOTRON ALARMS AS
Organization address
address: POD SKALKOU 4567/33 contact info |
CZ (JABLONEC NAD NISUO) | participant | 236˙720.00 |
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'ARDENT is a multi-site ITN that will provide training for 15 ESRs in the field of advanced instrumentation for radiation dosimetry. This training initiative is founded on actions aiming to strengthen and enrich international cooperation amongst all partners involved (7 Full and 5 Associate), promoting the technological transfer of the research results to industry through the active involvement of four industrial partners (3 Full and 1 Associate). The project focuses on three main technologies: gas detectors (gas electron multipliers and tissue equivalent proportional counters), solid state detectors (Medipix and silicon microdosimeters) and track detectors (CR-39 and nanodosimeters). It addresses the development of these types of instruments for mixed-field dosimetry, microdosimetry, spectrometry, beam monitoring. The applications range from the characterization of mixed radiation fields around particle accelerators, in particular accelerators for cancer therapy with electron, proton and carbon ions, on board commercial flights and in space, to the measurement of the secondary dose to patients undergoing radiation therapy, and can equally be employed for measurement of the properties of clinical hadron beams. The overall goal of ARDENT is to train young researchers in a sector that is very important for the future of European research, at the same time fostering the development of the European private sector. Some of the institutes involved in ARDENT have a long-standing bilateral collaboration but at present there is no global collaboration amongst all partners involved in this ITN. ARDENT therefore also represents an excellent opportunity to strengthen existing links and to create a new network among all partners. A series of network-wide activities, in terms of both training and collaborative research, and a strong programme of secondments are an essential part of this ITN. Several outreach activities complete the ARDENT programme.'
Accuracy in radiation dosimetry and the use of proton/ion beams for cancer therapy are increasing with progress in instrumentation. A large EU training network is conducting cutting-edge research in the development of radiation detectors with a number of industrial and medical applications.
Radiation dosimetry, or evaluation of the radiation dose absorbed by a person, has applications in monitoring occupational exposures, for assessing biomedical therapies, secondary (scatter-dependent) dose during radiation therapy, and even exposure of individuals on board commercial flights and of astronauts in space. A large international consortium of eight full and six associate partners is training early-stage researchers (ESRs) on relevant topics with EU support of the project http://www.cern.ch/ardent (ARDENT) (Advanced Radiation Dosimetry European Network Training initiative).
The project is intended to strengthen international cooperation and European research, promote technology transfer to industry, and prepare a new generation of scientists for an increasingly important career in radiation dosimetry. The focus is on gas detectors, solid-state detectors and track detectors (based on different speeds with which tracks of nuclear particles are etched relative to bulk materials). Researchers are developing and testing instrumentation for measuring energy distributions and dosimetric quantities in complex radiation fields and in monoenergetic particle beams used in cancer therapy.
All 15 ESRs have been successfully recruited and have been involved in an extensive research and training program. They come from 10 countries and about one fourth of them are women, a rather respectable number given female representation in the field overall. For each ESR, a project document keeps track of training courses, experimental activities, conferences and presentations, scientific publications, public outreach and secondments. The http://www.cern.ch/ardent (project web site) provides details on the project and its results.
In a fortuitous addition to the original plan, the European Space Agency (ESA) has offered secondments using the Geant4 simulator to study the response of the TimePix chip. TimePix is a hybrid semiconductor particle-tracking pixel detector for direct energy measurement of various types of radiation. The Geant4 is a toolkit for simulating the passage of particles through matter. Both were developed through collaborations at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Switzerland.
Several projects focus around development and applications of Timepix. A novel detector, GEMPix, built coupling two CERN technologies (GEM and Timepix) has been developed with potential applications in medical dosimetry, microdosimetry and in the measurements of low energy photon emitters for the characterization of radioactive waste.
A 4D phantom able to mimic the movement of a human thorax during breathing was developed, able to simulate the lungs, bones and tissue motion within a human torso and the 3D movement of a tumor inside it, as a function of time. It includes the possibility to insert passive and active detectors to precisely measure the delivered dose to a moving tumor in conventional radiation therapy and, in future, in advanced hadrontherapy centers.
ARDENT is conducting cutting-edge research in radiation dosimetry with an emphasis on industrial applications via its four industrial partners. The project trained a next generation of researchers in a key research area, fostered private sector development and strengthened international collaboration for a lasting legacy.
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