Production of Medical Radioisotopes with High Specific Activity in Photonuclear Reactions with $\gamma$ Beams of High Intensity and Large Brilliance
D. Habs, U. K\"oster

TL;DR
This paper explores advanced photonuclear reactions using high-brilliance gamma beams to produce medical radioisotopes with high specific activity, offering potential improvements over traditional methods for nuclear medicine applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach utilizing high flux, narrow bandwidth gamma beams for efficient production of medically relevant radioisotopes with higher specific activity and economic benefits.
Findings
High specific activity radioisotopes can be produced using narrow gamma beams.
Photonuclear reactions enable production of isotopes like $^{47}$Sc and $^{225}$Ac more efficiently.
Potential for new clinical applications with novel isotopes.
Abstract
We study the production of radioisotopes for nuclear medicine in photonuclear reactions or () photoexcitation reactions with high flux [()/s], small diameter m and small band width () beams produced by Compton back-scattering of laser light from relativistic brilliant electron beams. We compare them to (ion,np) reactions with (ion=p,d,) from particle accelerators like cyclotrons and (n,) or (n,f) reactions from nuclear reactors. For photonuclear reactions with a narrow beam the energy deposition in the target can be managed by using a stack of thin target foils or wires, hence avoiding direct stopping of the Compton and pair electrons (positrons). isomer production via specially selected …
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