BACKGROUND  The term employed to designate the value indicated by a radiation  measuring device in the absence of the source whose radiation is to be measured, when the device is placed under its normal conditions of operation. IUPAC82..

BACKGROUND RADIATION  Radiation  from any source other than the one to be detected or measured.

BACK EXTRACTING  See stripping  

BACKSCATTER  Scattering of radiation  in a generally backward direction. In the assay of radioactivity , it applies to the scattering of radiation into the radiation detector from any material except the sample and the detector . IUPAC82..

BACKWASHING  In an ion-exchange column, an upward flow of eluant through the resin bed serving to clean and reconstitute the exchanger bed. M.  

BADGE  A dosimeter  that is clipped onto clothing or worn as a "ring" on the finger and which is later processed to quantify exposure to radiation.

BALLISTIC DEFICIT  In proportional counters , when pulses are shaped using time constants  adjusted so that the slow component of the drift of ions do not contribute to the pulse amplitude, the shaped pulse has a lower amplitude than that corresponding to an infinite time constant by an amount known as the "ballistic deficit".

BARN  A unit of area used in expressing nuclear cross sections : 1 barn = 10-28m2. IUPAC82.. (Not a SI unit. Symbol is "b".)

BATCH PROCESS  A process, particularly in reference to separations, that is not continuous and which is conducted with discrete quantities of materials or a limited number of reagents. M.

BATEMAN EQUATIONS  The set of coupled differential equations that expresses the amounts of reactants and products as a function of time as these species are undergoing both production and loss by nuclear reaction and radioactive decay.  

BEAM  Collimated radiation  for the purpose of irradiation .

BEAM CURRENT  In a charged particle accelerator, the electric current determined by the number, velocity, and charge of the particles.

BEAM DUMP  See beam stop  

BEAM HOLE  In a reactor, a hole through the shielding which allows a beam of radiation, especially fast neutrons, to escape. M.

BEAM MONITORING  Measuring the intensity or energy flux density  of a beam .

BEAM STOP  Material at the end of a beam  placed there to completely stop and absorb the remaining beam particles .

BEAM TRAP  See beam stop  

BECQUEREL  SI unit of activity  or nuclear transition  rate equal to one per second (symbol 1 Bq). Caveat  illustration: The activity of 1 nanomole of 40K (half life = 1.25 X 109 years) would be approximately 10.5 Bq but the gamma activity of that same nanomole would be only 1.13 Bq because only 10.7% of 40K's decays involve a gamma branch. To avoid ambiguity, the latter should be referred to as 1.13 gamma Bq.

BETA DECAY  Nuclear decay  in which a beta particle  is emitted or in which orbital electron capture  occurs. IUPAC82..

BETA EMITTER  An atom  or nucleus  which undergoes radioactive decay  by emitting a beta particle  (b) and an antineutrino  or neutrino . The former accompanies a b- and the latter a b+.  

BETA PARTICLE  A negative or positive electron  which has been emitted by a nuclear particle  in a nuclear transformation . IUPAC82..

BGO DETECTOR  A solid scintillation detector  material based on bismuth germanate.  

BETA STABILITY LINE  On a graph of neutron number or of mass number vs  atomic number and displaying one or more properties of each nucleus, the locus of stable  nuclei. (Synonym: Segre curve)

BIASED LINEAR PULSE AMPLIFIER  See amplifier, biased linear pulse .

BI-ISOTOPIC MONITOR  The use of 95Zr and 97Zr for determination of the thermal  to epithermal neutron flux ratio  by activation analysis .  

BIFUNCTIONAL CHELATE  Complexing agent with two sites for complexation. NM.

BINDING  In competitive radioassay , the reactive forces between ligand and binding agent describable by the mass action law and measurable by the fraction of reagent tracer bound in the ligand-binding agent complex. NM.

BINDING AGENT  In competitive radioassay , the test reagent chosen, most commonly antibody, to react specifically with the substance under test via mass action, reversible reaction. NM.

BINDING CAPACITY  The amount of specific binding sites available per quantity of binding reagent. The extrapolated point of the X-axis of a Scatchard plot  performed under defined conditions. NM.

BINDING ENERGY  The energy necessary to break a nucleus into specified constituents; the total binding energy is the energy requirement to disassemble the nucleus entirely into protons and neutrons. The binding energy of a neutron in a nucleus is synonymous with its separation energy from that nucleus. It is the energy equivalent of the difference between the sum of the masses of the constituent neutrons and protons and the measured mass of that nucleus.

BIOCONJUGATE  An agent (usually a chelate  used to conjugate radionuclide to an antibody .

BIOLOGICAL HALF-LIFE  For a substance the time required for the amount of that substance in a biological system to be reduced to one half of its value by biological processes, when the rate of removal is approximately exponential. IUPAC82..

BNCT  Boron neutron capture therapy.

BOILING WATER REACTOR  A nuclear power reactor with enriched 235U fuel and boiling light water as moderator  and coolant.

BOLUS  A contiguous mass, such as a medically administered dose of labeled compound.

BOMBARDMENT  Irradiation  in a beam  of particles or photons.

BORON CARBIDE FILTER  In epithermal neutron activation analysis , a thickness of boron carbide (B4C) that is used instead of the more usual cadmium filter which is used to achieve the cadmium cutoff . In this way, one may avoid the induced activity that grows into the cadmium with use.  

BORON CHAMBER  An ionization chamber  that is lined or filled with boron or boron compounds. M.

BORON NITRIDE FILTER  In epithermal neutron activation analysis , a thickness of boron nitride (BN) can replace the more usual cadmium filter used to achieve the cadmium cutoff . In this way, one may avoid the induced activity that grows into the cadmium with use.

BOWEN'S STANDARD KALE  A reference material for the analysis of plant materials with known concentration values and ranges for a group of macroelements (Na, K, Ca, Mo, O, P, S, N, and Cl) as well as 30 trace elements. HRC.

Bq  The symbol for the becquerel  unit of activity  of a radioactive substance.

BRAGG CURVE  A graph of specific ionization  due to a charged particle passing through a material as a function of the penetration depth of that particle relative to its range; that is, as a function of its residual range . FFKM.

BRAGG PEAK  A peak in a Bragg curve  showing that the amount of ionization per millimeter of tissue or other stopping medium traversed by charged particles increases sharply as the particles slow down near the ends of their tracks. NM.  

BRAGG RULE  The mass stopping power  of a compound or mixture for charged particles is approximately given by the weighted sum of the stopping powers of all the components atoms. FFKM.

BRANCHING DECAY  Nuclear decay  which can proceed in two or more different ways. IUPAC82..

BRANCHING FRACTION  In branching decay  the fraction of nuclei which decay in a specified way. Synonymous with branching probability  IUPAC82..

BRANCHING PROBABILITY  See branching fraction .

BRANCHING RATIO  The ratio of the branching fraction  for two or more specified modes of decay. IUPAC82..

BREIT-WIGNER FORMULA  A formula describing the rapidly varying cross section for a nuclear reaction in the vicinity of one or more resonances . NM + FKMM.

BREMSSTRAHLUNG  The electromagnetic radiation  associated with the acceleration or deceleration of charged particles  in the presence of a Coulomb field.

BREMSSTRAHLUNG, INNER  Bremsstrahlung  which may accompany the emission or absorption of a charged particle  by a nucleus . IUPAC82..

BUILD-UP FACTOR  In the passage of radiation through a medium, the ratio of the total value of a specified radiation quantity at any point to the contribution to that value from radiation reaching the point without having undergone a collision. NM.

BURIAL GROUND  A place for burying unwanted radioactive objects to prevent their escape or escape of their radiations. M.

BURN-UP  Induced nuclear transformation  of atoms during reactor operation. IUPAC82..

BURN-UP FRACTION  The fraction of an initial quantity of a given nuclide that has undergone burn-up . IUPAC82..

BURN-UP, SPECIFIC  The total energy released through induced nuclear transformations  divided by the mass of a nuclear fuel. IUPAC82..

BURST  A sudden increase or appearance of particles or fragments emitted, of short duration, as in a nuclear bomb explosion.

BWR  See boiling water reactor .

BY-PRODUCT  Any radioactive material (except special nuclear material) yielded in or made radioactive by exposure to the radiation incident to the process of producing or utilizing special nuclear material. The tailings or waste products produced by the extraction or concentration of uranium or thorium from any ore processed primarily for its source material content. NM.