Jessica Lye - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Jessica Lye

Research paper thumbnail of Phase modulation spectroscopy: a non-destructive probe of Bose-Einstein condensates

Journal of Optics-nouvelle Revue D Optique, 1999

The measurement of the optical phase of far-detuned laser light by phase modulation spectroscopy ... more The measurement of the optical phase of far-detuned laser light by phase modulation spectroscopy is promising as a non-destructive probe of the dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates. We have developed the experimental technique on a room-temperature Cs vapour cell, and a Cs magneto-optical trap (MOT). We measure column densities with an accuracy better than 7%. A numerical model, including Doppler broadening

Research paper thumbnail of The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service: The Development and Delivery of a National Dosimetry Audit

Research paper thumbnail of Recent Activities in Measurement Standards and Dosimetry at ARPANSA, 2007-2009

Research paper thumbnail of National dosimetric audit network finds discrepancies in AAA lung inhomogeneity corrections

Physica Medica, 2015

This work presents the Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service's (ACDS) findings of an investigatio... more This work presents the Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service's (ACDS) findings of an investigation of systematic discrepancies between treatment planning system (TPS) calculated and measured audit doses. Specifically, a comparison between the Anisotropic Analytic Algorithm (AAA) and other common dose-calculation algorithms in regions downstream (! 2 cm) from low-density material in anthropomorphic and slab phantom geometries is presented. Two measurement setups involving rectilinear slabphantoms (ACDS Level II audit) and anthropomorphic geometries (ACDS Level III audit) were used in conjunction with ion chamber (planar 2D array and Farmer-type) measurements. Measured doses were compared to calculated doses for a variety of cases, with and without the presence of inhomogeneities and beam-modifiers in 71 audits. Results demonstrate a systematic AAA underdose with an average discrepancy of 2.9 ± 1.2% when the AAA algorithm is implemented in regions distal from lung-tissue interfaces, when lateral beams are used with anthropomorphic phantoms. This systemic discrepancy was found for all Level III audits of facilities using the AAA algorithm. This discrepancy is not seen when identical measurements are compared for other common dose-calculation algorithms (average discrepancy À0.4 ± 1.7%), including the Acuros XB algorithm also available with the Eclipse TPS. For slab phantom geometries (Level II audits), with similar measurement points downstream from inhomogeneities this discrepancy is also not seen. Crown

Research paper thumbnail of Maintaining the accuracy of the (60)Co calibration service at the ARPANSA post source replacement in 2010

Australasian physical & engineering sciences in medicine / supported by the Australasian College of Physical Scientists in Medicine and the Australasian Association of Physical Sciences in Medicine, Jan 7, 2015

The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) maintains a (60)Co teleth... more The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) maintains a (60)Co teletherapy source primarily for the calibration of therapy dosemeters. The source and encapsulating head were replaced in early 2010 with an Eldorado 78 head and new (60)Co source. In this article we present the results of ongoing accuracy and stability measurements since the replacement. A number of formal and informal indirect comparisons have been carried out with laboratories holding primary and secondary standards for (60)Co. ARPANSA chambers have also been calibrated at international primary standard laboratories allowing comparison of calibration coefficients and thus (60)Co absorbed dose standards. (60)Co calibration coefficients supplied by manufacturers of chambers were compared to those measured at the ARPANSA when this calibration was traceable to a primary standard. ARPANSA also participates in an annual international mailed dosimetry audit conducted by the International Atomic E...

Research paper thumbnail of Towards a Bose-Glass of ultracold atoms in a disordered crystal of light

Starting from one-dimensional Mott Insulators, we use a bichromatic optical lattice to add contro... more Starting from one-dimensional Mott Insulators, we use a bichromatic optical lattice to add controlled disorder to an ideal optical crystal where bosonic atoms are pinned by repulsive interactions. Increasing disorder, we observe a broadening of the Mott Insulator resonances and the transition to an insulating state with a flat density of excitations, suggesting the formation of a Bose-Glass.

Research paper thumbnail of Ultracold Atoms in a Disordered Crystal of Light: Towards a Bose Glass

Physical Review Letters, 2007

We use a bichromatic optical lattice to experimentally realize a disordered system of ultracold s... more We use a bichromatic optical lattice to experimentally realize a disordered system of ultracold strongly interacting 87Rb bosons. In the absence of disorder, the atoms are pinned by repulsive interactions in the sites of an ideal optical crystal, forming one-dimensional Mott-insulator states. We measure the excitation spectrum of the system as a function of disorder strength and characterize its phase-coherence properties with a time-of-flight technique. Increasing disorder, we observe a broadening of the Mott-insulator resonances and the transition to a state with vanishing long-range phase coherence and a flat density of excitations, which suggest the formation of a Bose-glass phase.

Research paper thumbnail of DYNAMICAL EFFECTS OF BACK-COUPLING ON AN ATOM LASER

Laser Spectroscopy - Proceedings of the XVI International Conference, 2004

Atom lasers have been demonstrated in both pulsed and semi-continuous modes. The dynamics of thes... more Atom lasers have been demonstrated in both pulsed and semi-continuous modes. The dynamics of these devices is predicted to be dramatically different to the optical laser due to fundamental differences between the two types of boson fields, however to date it is the similarities that have been emphasized. Here we show how the atom laser dynamics are strongly affected by coupling of the output beam back to the condensate.

Research paper thumbnail of Angular dependence of the response of the nanoDot OSLD system for measurements at depth in clinical megavoltage beams

Medical Physics, 2014

The purpose of this investigation was to assess the angular dependence of a commercial optically ... more The purpose of this investigation was to assess the angular dependence of a commercial optically stimulated luminescence dosimeter (OSLD) dosimetry system in MV x-ray beams at depths beyond d(max) and to find ways to mitigate this dependence for measurements in phantoms. Two special holders were designed which allow a dosimeter to be rotated around the center of its sensitive volume. The dosimeter's sensitive volume is a disk, 5 mm in diameter and 0.2 mm thick. The first holder rotates the disk in the traditional way. It positions the disk perpendicular to the beam (gantry pointing to the floor) in the initial position (0°). When the holder is rotated the angle of the disk towards the beam increases until the disk is parallel with the beam ("edge on," 90°). This is referred to as Setup 1. The second holder offers a new, alternative measurement position. It positions the disk parallel to the beam for all angles while rotating around its center (Setup 2). Measurements with five to ten dosimeters per point were carried out for 6 MV at 3 and 10 cm depth. Monte Carlo simulations using GEANT4 were performed to simulate the response of the active detector material for several angles. Detector and housing were simulated in detail based on microCT data and communications with the manufacturer. Various material compositions and an all-water geometry were considered. For the traditional Setup 1 the response of the OSLD dropped on average by 1.4% ± 0.7% (measurement) and 2.1% ± 0.3% (Monte Carlo simulation) for the 90° orientation compared to 0°. Monte Carlo simulations also showed a strong dependence of the effect on the composition of the sensitive layer. Assuming the layer to completely consist of the active material (Al2O3) results in a 7% drop in response for 90° compared to 0°. Assuming the layer to be completely water, results in a flat response within the simulation uncertainty of about 1%. For the new Setup 2, measurements and Monte Carlo simulations found the angular dependence of the dosimeter to be below 1% and within the measurement uncertainty. The dosimeter system exhibits a small angular dependence of approximately 2% which needs to be considered for measurements involving other than normal incident beams angles. This applies in particular to clinical in vivo measurements where the orientation of the dosimeter is dictated by clinical circumstances and cannot be optimized as otherwise suggested here. When measuring in a phantom, the proposed new setup should be considered. It changes the orientation of the dosimeter so that a coplanar beam arrangement always hits the disk shaped detector material from the thin side and thereby reduces the angular dependence of the response to within the measurement uncertainty of about 1%. This improvement makes the dosimeter more attractive for clinical measurements with multiple coplanar beams in phantoms, as the overall measurement uncertainty is reduced. Similarly, phantom based postal audits can transition from the traditional TLD to the more accurate and convenient OSLD.

Research paper thumbnail of A 2D ion chamber array audit of wedged and asymmetric fields in an inhomogeneous lung phantom

Medical Physics, 2014

The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service (ACDS) has implemented a new method of a nonreference c... more The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service (ACDS) has implemented a new method of a nonreference condition Level II type dosimetric audit of radiotherapy services to increase measurement accuracy and patient safety within Australia. The aim of this work is to describe the methodology, tolerances, and outcomes from the new audit. The ACDS Level II audit measures the dose delivered in 2D planes using an ionization chamber based array positioned at multiple depths. Measurements are made in rectilinear homogeneous and inhomogeneous phantoms composed of slabs of solid water and lung. Computer generated computed tomography data sets of the rectilinear phantoms are supplied to the facility prior to audit for planning of a range of cases including reference fields, asymmetric fields, and wedged fields. The audit assesses 3D planning with 6 MV photons with a static (zero degree) gantry. Scoring is performed using local dose differences between the planned and measured dose within 80% of the field width. The overall audit result is determined by the maximum dose difference over all scoring points, cases, and planes. Pass (Optimal Level) is defined as maximum dose difference ≤3.3%, Pass (Action Level) is ≤5.0%, and Fail (Out of Tolerance) is >5.0%. At close of 2013, the ACDS had performed 24 Level II audits. 63% of the audits passed, 33% failed, and the remaining audit was not assessable. Of the 15 audits that passed, 3 were at Pass (Action Level). The high fail rate is largely due to a systemic issue with modeling asymmetric 60° wedges which caused a delivered overdose of 5%-8%. The ACDS has implemented a nonreference condition Level II type audit, based on ion chamber 2D array measurements in an inhomogeneous slab phantom. The powerful diagnostic ability of this audit has allowed the ACDS to rigorously test the treatment planning systems implemented in Australian radiotherapy facilities. Recommendations from audits have led to facilities modifying clinical practice and changing planning protocols.

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Modeling in Dye Chemistry: Studies Involving Two Disperse Dyes

Textile Research Journal, 1999

ABSTRACT

Research paper thumbnail of Commissioning of optically stimulated luminescence dosimeters for use in radiotherapy

Radiation Measurements, 2013

h i g h l i g h t s < We detail the commissioning process for use of OSLD in radiotherapy. < OSLD... more h i g h l i g h t s < We detail the commissioning process for use of OSLD in radiotherapy. < OSLD shows promise as a replacement for TLD. < OSLD provides an efficient tool in large scale dosimetry operations. < The physical properties of OSLD are detailed and reported.

Research paper thumbnail of Spectral differences in 6 MV beams with matched PDDs and the effect on chamber response

Physics in Medicine and Biology, 2012

The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) has installed an Elekta S... more The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) has installed an Elekta Synergy platform linac to establish a direct megavoltage primary standard calibration service, instead of relying on calibrations derived from (60)Co. One of the 6 MV beams of the ARPANSA linac has been approximately matched to the Varian high energy platform 6 MV photon beam. The electron beam energy was adjusted to match the percentage depth dose (PDD) curve and TPR(20,10). This work calculates the error introduced when using a calibration factor from this Elekta Synergy Platform linac on a Varian high-energy platform beam at 6 MV. Monte Carlo models of the Varian and matched Elekta accelerator accurately predict the measured PDDs and profiles, but show significantly different energy spectra, resulting mainly from differences in target thickness between the two accelerators. Monte Carlo modelling of the energy correction factor k(Q) of a secondary standard NE2561 chamber shows a difference of 0.4% between the Varian and the Varian-matched Elekta beams. Although small, this is a significant discrepancy for primary standard calibrations. Similar variations are expected for chambers of similar construction, and additional variations may occur with other linac manufacturers. The work has also investigated the design of a custom flattening filter to precisely match the energy spectrum of the Varian beam on the Elekta platform.

Research paper thumbnail of Observation of Dynamical Instability for a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a Moving 1D Optical Lattice

Physical Review Letters, 2004

We have experimentally studied the unstable dynamics of a harmonically trapped Bose-Einstein cond... more We have experimentally studied the unstable dynamics of a harmonically trapped Bose-Einstein condensate loaded into a 1D moving optical lattice. The lifetime of the condensate in such a potential exhibits a dramatic dependence on the quasimomentum state. This is unambiguously attributed to the onset of dynamical instability, after a comparison with the predictions of the Gross-Pitaevskii theory. Deeply in the unstable region we observe the rapid appearance of complex structures in the atomic density profile, as a consequence of the condensate phase uniformity breakdown.

Research paper thumbnail of Bose-Einstein Condensate in a Random Potential

Physical Review Letters, 2005

An optical speckle potential is used to investigate the static and dynamic properties of a Bose-E... more An optical speckle potential is used to investigate the static and dynamic properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of disorder. For strong disorder the condensate is localized in the deep wells of the potential. With smaller levels of disorder, stripes are observed in the expanded density profile and strong damping of dipole and quadrupole oscillations is seen. Uncorrelated frequency shifts of the two modes are measured for a weak disorder and are explained using a sum-rules approach and by the numerical solution of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of Optical Disorder and Single Defects on the Expansion of a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a One-Dimensional Waveguide

Physical Review Letters, 2005

We investigate the one-dimensional expansion of a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical guide in... more We investigate the one-dimensional expansion of a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical guide in the presence of a random potential created with optical speckles. With the speckle the expansion of the condensate is strongly inhibited. A detailed investigation has been carried out varying the experimental conditions and checking the expansion when a single optical defect is present. The experimental results are in good agreement with numerical calculations based on the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.

Research paper thumbnail of Unstable regimes for a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical lattice

Physical Review A, 2005

We report on the experimental characterization of energetic and dynamical instability, two mechan... more We report on the experimental characterization of energetic and dynamical instability, two mechanisms responsible for the breakdown of Bloch waves in a Bose-Einstein condensate interacting with a 1D optical lattice. A clear separation of these two regimes is obtained performing measurements at different temperatures of the atomic sample. The timescales of the two processes have been determined by measuring the losses induced in the condensate. A simple phenomenological model is introduced for energetic instability while a full comparison is made between the experiment and the 3D Gross-Pitaevskii theory that accounts for dynamical instability.

Research paper thumbnail of Fluctuations and flux: The limits of multistate atom lasers

Physical Review A, 2004

By direct comparison between experiment and theory with no adjustable parameters, we show how the... more By direct comparison between experiment and theory with no adjustable parameters, we show how the classical fluctuations on a multistate atom laser beam increase with increasing flux. The fluctuations are inherent to state changing out coupling, rf, Raman, or otherwise and are likely to be present in all atom lasers, pulsed or continuous, that employ such out coupling. If not removed or avoided, these classical fluctuations will prevent shot noise limited measurement employing atom lasers of this kind.

Research paper thumbnail of Rapid real-time detection of cold atoms with minimal destruction

Physical Review A, 2004

... We would like to thank Andrew White from the University of Queensland for bringing the offset... more ... We would like to thank Andrew White from the University of Queensland for bringing the offset Sagnac interferometer to our attention and Malcolm Gray from the Australian National University for valuable ... 13 NP Robins, BJJ Slagmolen, DA Shaddock, JD Close, and MB Gray, Opt ...

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of interactions on the localization of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a quasiperiodic lattice

Physical Review A, 2007

The transport properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a 1D incommensurate bichromatic lattice... more The transport properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a 1D incommensurate bichromatic lattice are investigated both theoretically and experimentally. We observe a blockage of the center of mass motion with low atom number, and a return of motion when the atom number is increased. Solutions of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation show how the localization due to the quasi-disorder introduced by the incommensurate bichromatic lattice is affected by the interactions.

Research paper thumbnail of Phase modulation spectroscopy: a non-destructive probe of Bose-Einstein condensates

Journal of Optics-nouvelle Revue D Optique, 1999

The measurement of the optical phase of far-detuned laser light by phase modulation spectroscopy ... more The measurement of the optical phase of far-detuned laser light by phase modulation spectroscopy is promising as a non-destructive probe of the dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates. We have developed the experimental technique on a room-temperature Cs vapour cell, and a Cs magneto-optical trap (MOT). We measure column densities with an accuracy better than 7%. A numerical model, including Doppler broadening

Research paper thumbnail of The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service: The Development and Delivery of a National Dosimetry Audit

Research paper thumbnail of Recent Activities in Measurement Standards and Dosimetry at ARPANSA, 2007-2009

Research paper thumbnail of National dosimetric audit network finds discrepancies in AAA lung inhomogeneity corrections

Physica Medica, 2015

This work presents the Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service's (ACDS) findings of an investigatio... more This work presents the Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service's (ACDS) findings of an investigation of systematic discrepancies between treatment planning system (TPS) calculated and measured audit doses. Specifically, a comparison between the Anisotropic Analytic Algorithm (AAA) and other common dose-calculation algorithms in regions downstream (! 2 cm) from low-density material in anthropomorphic and slab phantom geometries is presented. Two measurement setups involving rectilinear slabphantoms (ACDS Level II audit) and anthropomorphic geometries (ACDS Level III audit) were used in conjunction with ion chamber (planar 2D array and Farmer-type) measurements. Measured doses were compared to calculated doses for a variety of cases, with and without the presence of inhomogeneities and beam-modifiers in 71 audits. Results demonstrate a systematic AAA underdose with an average discrepancy of 2.9 ± 1.2% when the AAA algorithm is implemented in regions distal from lung-tissue interfaces, when lateral beams are used with anthropomorphic phantoms. This systemic discrepancy was found for all Level III audits of facilities using the AAA algorithm. This discrepancy is not seen when identical measurements are compared for other common dose-calculation algorithms (average discrepancy À0.4 ± 1.7%), including the Acuros XB algorithm also available with the Eclipse TPS. For slab phantom geometries (Level II audits), with similar measurement points downstream from inhomogeneities this discrepancy is also not seen. Crown

Research paper thumbnail of Maintaining the accuracy of the (60)Co calibration service at the ARPANSA post source replacement in 2010

Australasian physical & engineering sciences in medicine / supported by the Australasian College of Physical Scientists in Medicine and the Australasian Association of Physical Sciences in Medicine, Jan 7, 2015

The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) maintains a (60)Co teleth... more The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) maintains a (60)Co teletherapy source primarily for the calibration of therapy dosemeters. The source and encapsulating head were replaced in early 2010 with an Eldorado 78 head and new (60)Co source. In this article we present the results of ongoing accuracy and stability measurements since the replacement. A number of formal and informal indirect comparisons have been carried out with laboratories holding primary and secondary standards for (60)Co. ARPANSA chambers have also been calibrated at international primary standard laboratories allowing comparison of calibration coefficients and thus (60)Co absorbed dose standards. (60)Co calibration coefficients supplied by manufacturers of chambers were compared to those measured at the ARPANSA when this calibration was traceable to a primary standard. ARPANSA also participates in an annual international mailed dosimetry audit conducted by the International Atomic E...

Research paper thumbnail of Towards a Bose-Glass of ultracold atoms in a disordered crystal of light

Starting from one-dimensional Mott Insulators, we use a bichromatic optical lattice to add contro... more Starting from one-dimensional Mott Insulators, we use a bichromatic optical lattice to add controlled disorder to an ideal optical crystal where bosonic atoms are pinned by repulsive interactions. Increasing disorder, we observe a broadening of the Mott Insulator resonances and the transition to an insulating state with a flat density of excitations, suggesting the formation of a Bose-Glass.

Research paper thumbnail of Ultracold Atoms in a Disordered Crystal of Light: Towards a Bose Glass

Physical Review Letters, 2007

We use a bichromatic optical lattice to experimentally realize a disordered system of ultracold s... more We use a bichromatic optical lattice to experimentally realize a disordered system of ultracold strongly interacting 87Rb bosons. In the absence of disorder, the atoms are pinned by repulsive interactions in the sites of an ideal optical crystal, forming one-dimensional Mott-insulator states. We measure the excitation spectrum of the system as a function of disorder strength and characterize its phase-coherence properties with a time-of-flight technique. Increasing disorder, we observe a broadening of the Mott-insulator resonances and the transition to a state with vanishing long-range phase coherence and a flat density of excitations, which suggest the formation of a Bose-glass phase.

Research paper thumbnail of DYNAMICAL EFFECTS OF BACK-COUPLING ON AN ATOM LASER

Laser Spectroscopy - Proceedings of the XVI International Conference, 2004

Atom lasers have been demonstrated in both pulsed and semi-continuous modes. The dynamics of thes... more Atom lasers have been demonstrated in both pulsed and semi-continuous modes. The dynamics of these devices is predicted to be dramatically different to the optical laser due to fundamental differences between the two types of boson fields, however to date it is the similarities that have been emphasized. Here we show how the atom laser dynamics are strongly affected by coupling of the output beam back to the condensate.

Research paper thumbnail of Angular dependence of the response of the nanoDot OSLD system for measurements at depth in clinical megavoltage beams

Medical Physics, 2014

The purpose of this investigation was to assess the angular dependence of a commercial optically ... more The purpose of this investigation was to assess the angular dependence of a commercial optically stimulated luminescence dosimeter (OSLD) dosimetry system in MV x-ray beams at depths beyond d(max) and to find ways to mitigate this dependence for measurements in phantoms. Two special holders were designed which allow a dosimeter to be rotated around the center of its sensitive volume. The dosimeter&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;#39;s sensitive volume is a disk, 5 mm in diameter and 0.2 mm thick. The first holder rotates the disk in the traditional way. It positions the disk perpendicular to the beam (gantry pointing to the floor) in the initial position (0°). When the holder is rotated the angle of the disk towards the beam increases until the disk is parallel with the beam (&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;quot;edge on,&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;quot; 90°). This is referred to as Setup 1. The second holder offers a new, alternative measurement position. It positions the disk parallel to the beam for all angles while rotating around its center (Setup 2). Measurements with five to ten dosimeters per point were carried out for 6 MV at 3 and 10 cm depth. Monte Carlo simulations using GEANT4 were performed to simulate the response of the active detector material for several angles. Detector and housing were simulated in detail based on microCT data and communications with the manufacturer. Various material compositions and an all-water geometry were considered. For the traditional Setup 1 the response of the OSLD dropped on average by 1.4% ± 0.7% (measurement) and 2.1% ± 0.3% (Monte Carlo simulation) for the 90° orientation compared to 0°. Monte Carlo simulations also showed a strong dependence of the effect on the composition of the sensitive layer. Assuming the layer to completely consist of the active material (Al2O3) results in a 7% drop in response for 90° compared to 0°. Assuming the layer to be completely water, results in a flat response within the simulation uncertainty of about 1%. For the new Setup 2, measurements and Monte Carlo simulations found the angular dependence of the dosimeter to be below 1% and within the measurement uncertainty. The dosimeter system exhibits a small angular dependence of approximately 2% which needs to be considered for measurements involving other than normal incident beams angles. This applies in particular to clinical in vivo measurements where the orientation of the dosimeter is dictated by clinical circumstances and cannot be optimized as otherwise suggested here. When measuring in a phantom, the proposed new setup should be considered. It changes the orientation of the dosimeter so that a coplanar beam arrangement always hits the disk shaped detector material from the thin side and thereby reduces the angular dependence of the response to within the measurement uncertainty of about 1%. This improvement makes the dosimeter more attractive for clinical measurements with multiple coplanar beams in phantoms, as the overall measurement uncertainty is reduced. Similarly, phantom based postal audits can transition from the traditional TLD to the more accurate and convenient OSLD.

Research paper thumbnail of A 2D ion chamber array audit of wedged and asymmetric fields in an inhomogeneous lung phantom

Medical Physics, 2014

The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service (ACDS) has implemented a new method of a nonreference c... more The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service (ACDS) has implemented a new method of a nonreference condition Level II type dosimetric audit of radiotherapy services to increase measurement accuracy and patient safety within Australia. The aim of this work is to describe the methodology, tolerances, and outcomes from the new audit. The ACDS Level II audit measures the dose delivered in 2D planes using an ionization chamber based array positioned at multiple depths. Measurements are made in rectilinear homogeneous and inhomogeneous phantoms composed of slabs of solid water and lung. Computer generated computed tomography data sets of the rectilinear phantoms are supplied to the facility prior to audit for planning of a range of cases including reference fields, asymmetric fields, and wedged fields. The audit assesses 3D planning with 6 MV photons with a static (zero degree) gantry. Scoring is performed using local dose differences between the planned and measured dose within 80% of the field width. The overall audit result is determined by the maximum dose difference over all scoring points, cases, and planes. Pass (Optimal Level) is defined as maximum dose difference ≤3.3%, Pass (Action Level) is ≤5.0%, and Fail (Out of Tolerance) is &amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;gt;5.0%. At close of 2013, the ACDS had performed 24 Level II audits. 63% of the audits passed, 33% failed, and the remaining audit was not assessable. Of the 15 audits that passed, 3 were at Pass (Action Level). The high fail rate is largely due to a systemic issue with modeling asymmetric 60° wedges which caused a delivered overdose of 5%-8%. The ACDS has implemented a nonreference condition Level II type audit, based on ion chamber 2D array measurements in an inhomogeneous slab phantom. The powerful diagnostic ability of this audit has allowed the ACDS to rigorously test the treatment planning systems implemented in Australian radiotherapy facilities. Recommendations from audits have led to facilities modifying clinical practice and changing planning protocols.

Research paper thumbnail of Molecular Modeling in Dye Chemistry: Studies Involving Two Disperse Dyes

Textile Research Journal, 1999

ABSTRACT

Research paper thumbnail of Commissioning of optically stimulated luminescence dosimeters for use in radiotherapy

Radiation Measurements, 2013

h i g h l i g h t s < We detail the commissioning process for use of OSLD in radiotherapy. < OSLD... more h i g h l i g h t s < We detail the commissioning process for use of OSLD in radiotherapy. < OSLD shows promise as a replacement for TLD. < OSLD provides an efficient tool in large scale dosimetry operations. < The physical properties of OSLD are detailed and reported.

Research paper thumbnail of Spectral differences in 6 MV beams with matched PDDs and the effect on chamber response

Physics in Medicine and Biology, 2012

The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) has installed an Elekta S... more The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) has installed an Elekta Synergy platform linac to establish a direct megavoltage primary standard calibration service, instead of relying on calibrations derived from (60)Co. One of the 6 MV beams of the ARPANSA linac has been approximately matched to the Varian high energy platform 6 MV photon beam. The electron beam energy was adjusted to match the percentage depth dose (PDD) curve and TPR(20,10). This work calculates the error introduced when using a calibration factor from this Elekta Synergy Platform linac on a Varian high-energy platform beam at 6 MV. Monte Carlo models of the Varian and matched Elekta accelerator accurately predict the measured PDDs and profiles, but show significantly different energy spectra, resulting mainly from differences in target thickness between the two accelerators. Monte Carlo modelling of the energy correction factor k(Q) of a secondary standard NE2561 chamber shows a difference of 0.4% between the Varian and the Varian-matched Elekta beams. Although small, this is a significant discrepancy for primary standard calibrations. Similar variations are expected for chambers of similar construction, and additional variations may occur with other linac manufacturers. The work has also investigated the design of a custom flattening filter to precisely match the energy spectrum of the Varian beam on the Elekta platform.

Research paper thumbnail of Observation of Dynamical Instability for a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a Moving 1D Optical Lattice

Physical Review Letters, 2004

We have experimentally studied the unstable dynamics of a harmonically trapped Bose-Einstein cond... more We have experimentally studied the unstable dynamics of a harmonically trapped Bose-Einstein condensate loaded into a 1D moving optical lattice. The lifetime of the condensate in such a potential exhibits a dramatic dependence on the quasimomentum state. This is unambiguously attributed to the onset of dynamical instability, after a comparison with the predictions of the Gross-Pitaevskii theory. Deeply in the unstable region we observe the rapid appearance of complex structures in the atomic density profile, as a consequence of the condensate phase uniformity breakdown.

Research paper thumbnail of Bose-Einstein Condensate in a Random Potential

Physical Review Letters, 2005

An optical speckle potential is used to investigate the static and dynamic properties of a Bose-E... more An optical speckle potential is used to investigate the static and dynamic properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of disorder. For strong disorder the condensate is localized in the deep wells of the potential. With smaller levels of disorder, stripes are observed in the expanded density profile and strong damping of dipole and quadrupole oscillations is seen. Uncorrelated frequency shifts of the two modes are measured for a weak disorder and are explained using a sum-rules approach and by the numerical solution of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of Optical Disorder and Single Defects on the Expansion of a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a One-Dimensional Waveguide

Physical Review Letters, 2005

We investigate the one-dimensional expansion of a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical guide in... more We investigate the one-dimensional expansion of a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical guide in the presence of a random potential created with optical speckles. With the speckle the expansion of the condensate is strongly inhibited. A detailed investigation has been carried out varying the experimental conditions and checking the expansion when a single optical defect is present. The experimental results are in good agreement with numerical calculations based on the Gross-Pitaevskii equation.

Research paper thumbnail of Unstable regimes for a Bose-Einstein condensate in an optical lattice

Physical Review A, 2005

We report on the experimental characterization of energetic and dynamical instability, two mechan... more We report on the experimental characterization of energetic and dynamical instability, two mechanisms responsible for the breakdown of Bloch waves in a Bose-Einstein condensate interacting with a 1D optical lattice. A clear separation of these two regimes is obtained performing measurements at different temperatures of the atomic sample. The timescales of the two processes have been determined by measuring the losses induced in the condensate. A simple phenomenological model is introduced for energetic instability while a full comparison is made between the experiment and the 3D Gross-Pitaevskii theory that accounts for dynamical instability.

Research paper thumbnail of Fluctuations and flux: The limits of multistate atom lasers

Physical Review A, 2004

By direct comparison between experiment and theory with no adjustable parameters, we show how the... more By direct comparison between experiment and theory with no adjustable parameters, we show how the classical fluctuations on a multistate atom laser beam increase with increasing flux. The fluctuations are inherent to state changing out coupling, rf, Raman, or otherwise and are likely to be present in all atom lasers, pulsed or continuous, that employ such out coupling. If not removed or avoided, these classical fluctuations will prevent shot noise limited measurement employing atom lasers of this kind.

Research paper thumbnail of Rapid real-time detection of cold atoms with minimal destruction

Physical Review A, 2004

... We would like to thank Andrew White from the University of Queensland for bringing the offset... more ... We would like to thank Andrew White from the University of Queensland for bringing the offset Sagnac interferometer to our attention and Malcolm Gray from the Australian National University for valuable ... 13 NP Robins, BJJ Slagmolen, DA Shaddock, JD Close, and MB Gray, Opt ...

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of interactions on the localization of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a quasiperiodic lattice

Physical Review A, 2007

The transport properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a 1D incommensurate bichromatic lattice... more The transport properties of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a 1D incommensurate bichromatic lattice are investigated both theoretically and experimentally. We observe a blockage of the center of mass motion with low atom number, and a return of motion when the atom number is increased. Solutions of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation show how the localization due to the quasi-disorder introduced by the incommensurate bichromatic lattice is affected by the interactions.