The gray (symbol: Gy) is the SI unit of absorbed dose.
Note that these are the same units as the sievert. To avoid any risk of confusion between the absorbed dose and the equivalent dose, one must use the corresponding special units, namely the gray instead of the joule per kilogram for absorbed dose and the sievert instead of the joule per kilogram for the dose equivalent.
The gray was defined in 1975 in honor of Louis Harold Gray (1905-1965), who used a similar concept, “that amount of neutron radiation which produces an increment of energy in unit volume of tissue equal to the increment of energy produced in unit volume of water by one röntgen of radiation,” in 1940.
The röntgen is defined as the radiation exposure equal to the quantity of ionising radiation that will produce one esu of electricity in one cubic centimetre of dry air at 0 °C and a standard atmosphere , and is conventionally taken to be worth 0.258 mC/kg (using a conventional air density of about 1.293 kg/m³). Using an air ionisation energy of about 36.161 J/C, we have 1 Gy ≈ 107.185 R.
SI derived units | Nuclear physics | Nuclear chemistry | Units of radiation dose
جراي (وحدة) | Gray | Gray (unidad radiobiológica) | Gray (unité) | Gray | גריי | Gray | グレイ (単位) | Gray (enhet) | Gray (eining) | Grej | Grey | Грэй (единица измерения) | Gray | Греј (јединица) | Gray | Gray
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