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Dive into the research topics where M. A. Cortés-Giraldo is active.

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Featured researches published by M. A. Cortés-Giraldo.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

Performance of upstream interaction region detectors for the FIRST experiment at GSI

Z. Abou-Haidar; C. Agodi; M. A. G. Alvarez; M. Anelli; T. Aumann; G. Battistoni; A. Bocci; T.T. Böhlen; A. Boudard; Antonio Brunetti; M. Carpinelli; G.A.P. Cirrone; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; G. Cuttone; M. De Napoli; M. Durante; J.P. Fernández-García; Ch. Finck; M.I. Gallardo; Bruno Golosio; E. Iarocci; Felice Iazzi; G. Ickert; R. Introzzi; D. Juliani; J. Krimmer; N. Kurz; M. Labalme; Y. Leifels; A. Le Fèvre

The FIRST (Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy) experiment at GSI has been designed to study carbon fragmentation, measuring 12C double differential cross sections (∂2σ/∂θ∂E) for different beam energies between 100 and 1000 MeV/u. The experimental setup integrates newly designed detectors in the, so called, Interaction Region around the graphite target. The Interaction Region upstream detectors are a 250 μm thick scintillator and a drift chamber optimized for a precise measurement of the ions interaction time and position on the target. In this article we review the design of the upstream detectors along with the preliminary results of the data taking performed on August 2011 with 400 MeV/u fully stripped carbon ion beam at GSI. Detectors performances will be reviewed and compared to those obtained during preliminary tests, performed with 500 MeV electrons (at the BTF facility in the INFN Frascati Laboratories) and 80 MeV/u protons and carbon ions (at the INFN LNS Laboratories in Catania).


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2016

Analytical calculation of proton linear energy transfer in voxelized geometries including secondary protons.

D Sánchez-Parcerisa; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; D Dolney; M Kondrla; Marcus Fager; Alejandro Carabe

In order to integrate radiobiological modelling with clinical treatment planning for proton radiotherapy, we extended our in-house treatment planning system FoCa with a 3D analytical algorithm to calculate linear energy transfer (LET) in voxelized patient geometries. Both active scanning and passive scattering delivery modalities are supported. The analytical calculation is much faster than the Monte-Carlo (MC) method and it can be implemented in the inverse treatment planning optimization suite, allowing us to create LET-based objectives in inverse planning. The LET was calculated by combining a 1D analytical approach including a novel correction for secondary protons with pencil-beam type LET-kernels. Then, these LET kernels were inserted into the proton-convolution-superposition algorithm in FoCa. The analytical LET distributions were benchmarked against MC simulations carried out in Geant4. A cohort of simple phantom and patient plans representing a wide variety of sites (prostate, lung, brain, head and neck) was selected. The calculation algorithm was able to reproduce the MC LET to within 6% (1 standard deviation) for low-LET areas (under 1.7 keV μm(-1)) and within 22% for the high-LET areas above that threshold. The dose and LET distributions can be further extended, using radiobiological models, to include radiobiological effectiveness (RBE) calculations in the treatment planning system. This implementation also allows for radiobiological optimization of treatments by including RBE-weighted dose constraints in the inverse treatment planning process.


International Journal of Radiation Biology | 2012

An implementation to read and write IAEA phase-space files in GEANT4-based simulations

M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; J. Quesada; M.I. Gallardo; R. Capote

Abstract Purpose: To develop a stand-alone code to make any application coded with the GEANT4 (GEometry ANd Tracking, version 4) toolkit capable of reading and writing phase-space (phsp) files in the format created by the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency), so that the exchange of phsp files between other validated Monte Carlo (MC) codes and GEANT4 is possible. Methods: We present a stand-alone code, written in C++ object-oriented language, developed in a way that ensures the compatibility with future versions of the IAEA phsp format. The aim of the reader part is to get the information from a given IAEA phsp file and create the primary particles in a GEANT4 user application. On the other hand, the writer part of the code is the responsible for writing the IAEA phsp files during a run of the GEANT4 application. Results: A testing simulation was written with GEANT4 to verify the performance of this code, with satisfactory results. An example of use in a GEANT4 application which simulates the treatment head of a radiotherapy linear electron accelerator (linac) is also shown, comparing dose calculations with experimental data. Conclusions: This stand-alone package, which can be used in any GEANT4 application, allows the exchange of validated phsp files between different MC codes and the use of phsp data from many different accelerators and fields in dosimetry studies. Furthermore, it also offers additional utilities of interest in medical applications.


11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012) | 2013

FIRST experiment: Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy

C. Agodi; Z. Abou-Haidar; M. A. G. Alvarez; T. Aumann; F. Balestra; G. Battistoni; A. Bocci; T.T. Böhlen; M Bondì; A. Boudard; A. Brunetti; M. Carpinelli; F Cappuzzello; M Cavallaro; D Carbone; G.A.P. Cirrone; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; G. Cuttone; M. De Napoli; Marco Durante; J.P. Fernández-García; C Finck; A Foti; M.I. Gallardo; Bruno Golosio; E. Iarocci; Felice Iazzi; G. Ickert; R. Introzzi; D. Juliani

Nuclear fragmentation processes are relevant in different fields of basic research and applied physics and are of particular interest for tumor therapy and for space radiation protection applications. The FIRST (Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy) experiment at SIS accelerator of GSI laboratory in Darmstadt, has been designed for the measurement of different ions fragmentation cross sections at different energies between 100 and 1000 MeV/nucleon. The experiment is performed by an international collaboration made of institutions from Germany, France, Italy and Spain. The experimental apparatus is partly based on an already existing setup made of the ALADIN magnet, the MUSIC IV TPC, the LAND2 neutron detector and the TOFWALL scintillator TOF system, integrated with newly designed detectors in the interaction Region (IR) around the carbon removable target: a scintillator Start Counter, a Beam Monitor drift chamber, a silicon Vertex Detector and a Proton Tagger for detection of light fragments emitted at large angles (KENTROS). The scientific program of the FIRST experiment started on summer 2011 with the study of the 400 MeV/nucleon 12C beam fragmentation on thin (8mm) carbon target.


Archive | 2012

Monte Carlo Methods to Model Radiation Interactions and Induced Damage

Antonio Muñoz; Martina Fuss; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; S. Incerti; V. Ivanchenko; Anton Ivanchenko; J. Quesada; Francesc Salvat; C. Champion; Gustavo García Gómez-Tejedor

This review is devoted to the analysis of some Monte Carlo (MC) simulation programmes which have been developed to describe radiation interaction with biologically relevant materials. Current versions of the MC codes Geant4 (GEometry ANd Tracking 4), PENELOPE (PENetration and Energy Loss of Positrons and Electrons), EPOTRAN (Electron and POsitron TRANsport), and LEPTS (Low-Energy Particle Track Simulation) are described. Mean features of each model, as the type of radiation to consider, the energy range covered by primary and secondary particles, the type of interactions included in the simulation and the considered target geometries are discussed. Special emphasis lies on recent developments that, together with (still emerging) new databases that include adequate data for biologically relevant materials, bring us continuously closer to a realistic, physically meaningful description of radiation damage in biological tissues.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2017

Fragmentation of 120 and 200 MeV u−1 4He ions in water and PMMA targets

M. Rovituso; C. Schuy; Uli Weber; S Brons; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; C La Tessa; E Piasetzky; D Izraeli; Dieter Schardt; M. Toppi; Emanuele Scifoni; Michael Krämer; Marco Durante

Recently, the use of 4He particles in cancer radiotherapy has been reconsidered as they potentially represent a good compromise between protons and 12C ions. The first step to achieve this goal is the development of a dedicated treatment planning system, for which basic physics information such as the characterization of the beam lateral scattering and fragmentation cross sections are required. In the present work, the attenuation of 4He primary particles and the build-up of secondary charged fragments at various depths in water and polymethyl methacrylate were investigated experimentally for 120 and 200 MeV u-1 beams delivered by the synchrotron at the Heidelberg Ion-Beam Therapy Center, Heidelberg. Species and isotope identification was accomplished combining energy loss and time-of-flight measurements. Differential yields and energy spectra of all fragments types were recorded between 0° and 20° with respect to the primary beam direction.


21st International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP2015) | 2015

Progress in Geant4 Electromagnetic Physics Modelling and Validation

J. Apostolakis; Makoto Asai; A Bagulya; Jeremy Michael Cooney Brown; H. Burkhardt; N Chikuma; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; S Elles; V.M. Grichine; Susanna Guatelli; S. Incerti; Vladimir N. Ivanchenko; J Jacquemier; O Kadri; M. Maire; L. Pandola; D Sawkey; Toshiyuki Toshito; L. Urban; T. Yamashita

In this work we report on recent improvements in the electromagnetic (EM) physics models of Geant4 and new validations of EM physics. Improvements have been made in models of the photoelectric effect, Compton scattering, gamma conversion to electron and muon pairs, fluctuations of energy loss, multiple scattering, synchrotron radiation, and high energy positron annihilation. The results of these developments are included in the new Geant4 version 10.1 and in patches to previous versions 9.6 and 10.0 that are planned to be used for production for run-2 at LHC. The Geant4 validation suite for EM physics has been extended and new validation results are shown in this work. In particular, the effect of gamma-nuclear interactions on EM shower shape at LHC energies is discussed.


Physica Medica | 2017

Dosimetric impact assessment using a general algorithm in geant4 simulations for a complex-shaped multileaf collimator

A. Perales; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; H. Miras; R. Arráns; M.I. Gallardo

PURPOSE We have developed an inhouse algorithm for the multileaf collimator (MLC) geometry model construction with an appropriate accuracy for dosimetric tests. Our purpose is to build a complex type of MLC and analyze the influence of the modeling parameters on the dose calculation. METHODS Using radiochromic films as detector the following tests were done: (I) Density test field: to compare measured and calculated dose distributions in order to determine the tungsten alloy physical density value. (II) Leaf ends test field: to verify the penumbra shape sensitivity against the discretization level set to simulate the curved leaf ends. (III) MLC-closed field: to obtain the value of the air gap between opposite leaves for a closed configuration which completes the modeling of the MLC leakage radiation. (IV) Picket-fence field: to fit the leaf tilt angle with respect of the divergent ray emerging from the source. RESULTS For a 18.5g/cm3 density value we have obtained a maximum, minimum and mean leakage values of 0.43%, 0.36% and 0.38%, similar to the experimental ones. The best discretization level in the leaf ends field shows a 5.51mm FWHM, very close to the measured value (5.49mm). An air gap of 370μm has been used in the simulation for the separation between opposite leaves. Using a 0.44° tilt angle, we found the same pattern as the experimental values. CONCLUSIONS Our code can reproduce complex MLC designs with a submilimetric dosimetric accuracy which implies the necessary background for dose calculation of high clinical interest small fields.


European Physical Journal A | 2017

On the role of secondary pions in spallation targets

D. Mancusi; Sergio Lo Meo; N. Colonna; A. Boudard; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; Joseph Cugnon; Jean-Christophe David; Sylvie Leray; J. Lerendegui-Marco; Cristian Massimi; Vasilis Vlachoudis

Abstract.We use particle-transport simulations to show that secondary pions play a crucial role for the development of the hadronic cascade and therefore for the production of neutrons and photons from thick spallation targets. In particular, for the n_TOF lead spallation target, irradiated with 20 GeV/c protons, neutral pions are involved in the production of


Journal of Instrumentation | 2015

3D cylindrical silicon microdosimeters: fabrication, simulation and charge collection study

C. Fleta; S. Esteban; M. Baselga; D. Quirion; G. Pellegrini; Consuelo Guardiola; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; J. García López; M.C. Jiménez Ramos; F. Gómez; M. Lozano

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D. Cano-Ott

Complutense University of Madrid

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L. Audouin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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