Theoretical methods for the calculation of Bragg curves and 3D distributions of proton beams
Waldemar Ulmer, Evangelos Matsinos

TL;DR
This paper develops and compares theoretical methods based on the Langevin and Bethe-Bloch equations for calculating Bragg curves and 3D proton beam distributions, validated against Monte Carlo simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a relativistic extension of the Langevin equation and a complete integration of the Bethe-Bloch equation for precise proton range calculations.
Findings
Relativistic corrections improve range estimates.
Bethe-Bloch integration matches Monte Carlo results.
Method provides detailed energy and dose distributions.
Abstract
The well-known Bragg-Kleeman rule RCSDA = A dot E0p has become a pioneer work in radiation physics of charged particles and is still a useful tool to estimate the range RCSDA of approximately monoenergetic protons with initial energy E0 in a homogeneous medium. The rule is based on the continuous-slowing-down-approximation (CSDA). It results from a generalized (nonrelativistic) Langevin equation and a modification of the phenomenological friction term. The complete integration of this equation provides information about the residual energy E(z) and dE(z)/dz at each position z (0 <= z <= RCSDA). A relativistic extension of the generalized Langevin equation yields the formula RCSDA = A dot (E0 +E02/2M dot c2)p. The initial energy of therapeutic protons satisfies E0 << 2M dot c2 (M dot c2 = 938.276 MeV), which enables us to consider the relativistic contributions as correction terms.…
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