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Featured researches published by S. Muraro.


HADRONIC SHOWER SIMULATION WORKSHOP | 2007

The FLUKA code: description and benchmarking

G. Battistoni; F. Cerutti; A. Fassò; A. Ferrari; S. Muraro; J. Ranft; S. Roesler; P. Sala

The physics model implemented inside the FLUKA code are briefly described, with emphasis on hadronic interactions. Examples of the capabilities of the code are presented including basic (thin target) and complex benchmarks.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2012

Charged particle’s flux measurement from PMMA irradiated by 80 MeV/u carbon ion beam

C. Agodi; G. Battistoni; F. Bellini; G.A.P. Cirrone; F. Collamati; G. Cuttone; E. De Lucia; M. De Napoli; A. Di Domenico; R. Faccini; F. Ferroni; S. Fiore; P. Gauzzi; E. Iarocci; M. Marafini; I. Mattei; S. Muraro; A. Paoloni; V. Patera; L. Piersanti; F. Romano; A. Sarti; A. Sciubba; E. Vitale; C. Voena

Hadrontherapy is an emerging technique in cancer therapy that uses beams of charged particles. To meet the improved capability of hadrontherapy in matching the dose release with the cancer position, new dose-monitoring techniques need to be developed and introduced into clinical use. The measurement of the fluxes of the secondary particles produced by the hadron beam is of fundamental importance in the design of any dose-monitoring device and is eagerly needed to tune Monte Carlo simulations. We report the measurements carried out with charged secondary particles produced from the interaction of a 80 MeV/u fully stripped carbon ion beam at the INFN Laboratori Nazionali del Sud, Catania, with a poly-methyl methacrylate target. Charged secondary particles, produced at 90° with respect to the beam axis, have been tracked with a drift chamber, while their energy and time of flight have been measured by means of a LYSO scintillator. Secondary protons have been identified exploiting the energy and time-of-flight information, and their emission region has been reconstructed backtracking from the drift chamber to the target. Moreover, a position scan of the target indicates that the reconstructed emission region follows the movement of the expected Bragg peak position. Exploiting the reconstruction of the emission region, an accuracy on the Bragg peak determination in the submillimeter range has been obtained. The measured differential production rate for protons produced with E(Prod)(kin) > 83 MeV and emitted at 90° with respect to the beam line is dN(P)/(dN(C)dΩ) (E(Prod)(kin) > 83 MeV, θ = 90°) = (2.69 ± 0.08(stat) ± 0.12(sys)) × 10⁻⁴ sr⁻¹.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2003

Performance of the 10 m 3 ICARUS liquid argon prototype

F. Arneodo; A. Badertscher; B. Baiboussinov; G. Battistoni; P. Benetti; E. Bernardini; M. Bischofberger; A. Borio di Tigliole; R. Brunetti; A. Bueno; E. Calligarich; M. Campanelli; C. Carpanese; D. Cavalli; F. Cavanna; P. Cennini; S. Centro; A. Cesana; C. Chen; D. Chen; Y. C. Chen; D. Cline; C. De Vecchi; A. Di Credico; R. Dolfini; A. Ferrari; F. Ferri; A. Gigli Berzolari; I. Gil-Botella; L. Grandi

Abstract We report on the performance of a liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber, operating in a 10 m 3 cryostat. This device built in the framework of the ICARUS T600 programme to serve as a full test facility for the adopted cryogenics and mechanical solutions, was successfully tested in 2000 as the last step before the tests of the first 600 t ICARUS module 1 year later. In a final run at the Gran Sasso Laboratory, whose outcome provides the main subject of this paper, also the readout and imaging capabilities of the installed wire chamber and the overall performance of the detector have been successfully tested.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2006

The FLUKA code: an overview

F. Ballarini; G. Battistoni; M. Campanella; M. Carboni; Francesco Cerutti; A. Empl; A. Fassò; A. Ferrari; E. Gadioli; M. V. Garzelli; M. Lantz; M. Liotta; A. Mairani; A. Mostacci; S. Muraro; A. Ottolenghi; M. Pelliccioni; L. Pinsky; J. Ranft; S. Roesler; P. Sala; D. Scannicchio; S. Trovati; R. Villari; T. Wilson; N. Zapp; Vasilis Vlachoudis

FLUKA is a multipurpose Monte Carlo code which can transport a variety of particles over a wide energy range in complex geometries. The code is a joint project of INFN and CERN: part of its development is also supported by the University of Houston and NASA. FLUKA is successfully applied in several fields, including but not only, particle physics, cosmic ray physics, dosimetry, radioprotection, hadron therapy, space radiation, accelerator design and neutronics. The code is the standard tool used at CERN for dosimetry, radioprotection and beam-machine interaction studies. Here we give a glimpse into the code physics models with a particular emphasis to the hadronic and nuclear sector.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2017

Secondary radiation measurements for particle therapy applications: prompt photons produced by

I. Mattei; A. Sarti; D. Pinci; Andrea Russomando; R. Paramatti; M. Marafini; Carlo Mancini-Terracciano; Francesco Collamati; L. Piersanti; Elena Solfaroli Camillocci; Giacomo Traini; Paola Maria Frallicciardi; Antoni Rucinski; Erika De Lucia; S. Muraro; M. Toppi; Riccardo Faccini; A. Sciubba; C. Voena; G. Battistoni; V. Patera

Charged particle beams are used in particle therapy (PT) to treat oncological patients due to their selective dose deposition in tissues with respect to the photons and electrons used in conventional radiotherapy. Heavy (Z  >  1) PT beams can additionally be exploited for their high biological effectiveness in killing cancer cells. Nowadays, protons and carbon ions are used in PT clinical routines. Recently, interest in the potential application of helium and oxygen beams has been growing. With respect to protons, such beams are characterized by their reduced multiple scattering inside the body, increased linear energy transfer, relative biological effectiveness and oxygen enhancement ratio. The precision of PT demands online dose monitoring techniques, crucial to improving the quality assurance of any treatment: possible patient mis-positioning and biological tissue changes with respect to the planning CT scan could negatively affect the outcome of the therapy. The beam range confined in the irradiated target can be monitored thanks to the neutral or charged secondary radiation emitted by the interactions of hadron beams with matter. Among these secondary products, prompt photons are produced by nuclear de-excitation processes, and at present, different dose monitoring and beam range verification techniques based on prompt-γ detection are being proposed. It is hence of importance to perform γ yield measurement in therapeutic-like conditions. In this paper we report on the yields of prompt photons produced by the interaction of helium, carbon and oxygen ion beams with a poly-methyl methacrylate (PMMA) beam stopping target. The measurements were performed at the Heidelberg Ion-Beam Therapy Center (HIT) with beams of different energies. An LYSO scintillator, placed at [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] with respect to the beam direction, was used as the photon detector. The obtained γ yields for the carbon ion beams are compared with results from the literature, while no other results from helium and oxygen beams have been published yet. A discussion on the expected resolution of a slit camera detector is presented, demonstrating the feasibility of a prompt-γ-based monitoring technique for PT treatments using helium, carbon and oxygen ion beams.


arXiv: High Energy Physics - Phenomenology | 2008

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G. Battistoni; F. Cerutti; A. Empl; A. Fassò; A. Ferrari; E. Gadioli; M. V. Garzelli; S. Muraro; M. Pelliccioni; L. Pinsky; Johannes Ranft; S. Roesler; P. Sala; R. Villari

FLUKA is a general purpose Monte Carlo transport and interaction code used for fundamental physics and for a wide range of applications. These include Cosmic Ray Physics (muons, neutrinos, EAS, underground physics), both for basic research and applied studies in space and atmospheric flight dosimetry and radiation damage. A review of the hadronic models available in FLUKA and relevant for the description of cosmic ray air showers is presented in this paper. Recent updates concerning these models are discussed. The FLUKA capabilities in the simulation of the formation and propagation of EM and hadronic showers in the Earth’s atmosphere are shown.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2017

He,

M. Marafini; R. Paramatti; D. Pinci; G. Battistoni; F. Collamati; E. De Lucia; R. Faccini; Paola Maria Frallicciardi; Carlo Mancini-Terracciano; I. Mattei; S. Muraro; L. Piersanti; M. Rovituso; Antoni Rucinski; Andrea Russomando; A. Sarti; A. Sciubba; E. Solfaroli Camillocci; M. Toppi; G. Traini; C. Voena; V. Patera

Nowadays there is a growing interest in particle therapy treatments exploiting light ion beams against tumors due to their enhanced relative biological effectiveness and high space selectivity. In particular promising results are obtained by the use of 4He projectiles. Unlike the treatments performed using protons, the beam ions can undergo a fragmentation process when interacting with the atomic nuclei in the patient body. In this paper the results of measurements performed at the Heidelberg Ion-Beam Therapy center are reported. For the first time the absolute fluxes and the energy spectra of the fragments-protons, deuterons, and tritons-produced by 4He ion beams of 102, 125 and 145 MeV u-1 energies on a poly-methyl methacrylate target were evaluated at different angles. The obtained results are particularly relevant in view of the necessary optimization and review of the treatment planning software being developed for clinical use of 4He beams in clinical routine and the relative bench-marking of Monte Carlo algorithm predictions.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

^{12}

G. Battistoni; A. Margiotta; S. Muraro; Maximiliano Sioli

FLUKA is a multipurpose Monte Carlo code, which can transport particles over a wide range of energies in user-defined geometries. Here we present a new FLUKA library, which allows the interaction and propagation of high energy cosmic rays in the Earth atmosphere and the transport of high energy muons in underground/underwater environments.


Physica Medica | 2017

C and

Giacomo Traini; G. Battistoni; Angela Bollella; Francesco Collamati; Erika De Lucia; Riccardo Faccini; F. Ferroni; Paola Maria Frallicciardi; Carlo Mancini-Terracciano; M. Marafini; I. Mattei; Federico Miraglia; S. Muraro; R. Paramatti; L. Piersanti; D. Pinci; Antoni Rucinski; Andrea Russomando; A. Sarti; A. Sciubba; Martina Senzacqua; Elena Solfaroli-Camillocci; M. Toppi; C. Voena; V. Patera

Charged particle therapy is a technique for cancer treatment that exploits hadron beams, mostly protons and carbon ions. A critical issue is the monitoring of the beam range so to check the correct dose deposition to the tumor and surrounding tissues. The design of a new tracking device for beam range real-time monitoring in pencil beam carbon ion therapy is presented. The proposed device tracks secondary charged particles produced by beam interactions in the patient tissue and exploits the correlation of the charged particle emission profile with the spatial dose deposition and the Bragg peak position. The detector, currently under construction, uses the information provided by 12 layers of scintillating fibers followed by a plastic scintillator and a pixelated Lutetium Fine Silicate (LFS) crystal calorimeter. An algorithm to account and correct for emission profile distortion due to charged secondaries absorption inside the patient tissue is also proposed. Finally detector reconstruction efficiency for charged particle emission profile is evaluated using a Monte Carlo simulation considering a quasi-realistic case of a non-homogenous phantom.


Archive | 2004

^{16}

L. Pinsky; V. Anderson; A. Empl; K. S. Lee; G.I. Smirnov; N. Zapp; A. Ferrari; K. Tsoulou; S. Roesler; Vasilis Vlachoudis; G. Battisoni; F. Ceruti; M. V. Gadioli; M. V. Garzelli; S. Muraro; T. Rancati; P. Sala; R. Ballarini; A. Ottolenghi; V. Parini; D. Scannicchio; M. Pelliccioni; T. Wilson

The FLUKA Monte Carlo transport code is a well-known simulation tool in High Energy Physics. FLUKA is a dynamic tool in the sense that it is being continually updated and improved by the authors. We review the progress achieved since the last CHEP Conference on the physics models, some technical improvements to the code and some recent applications. From the point of view of the physics, improvements have been made with the extension of PEANUT to higher energies for p, n, pi, pbar/nbar and for nbars down to the lowest energies, the addition of the online capability to evolve radioactive products and get subsequent dose rates, upgrading of the treatment of EM interactions with the elimination of the need to separately prepare preprocessed files. A new coherent photon scattering model, an updated treatment of the photo-electric effect, an improved pair production model, new photon cross sections from the LLNL Cullen database have been implemented. In the field of nucleus-- nucleus interactions the electromagnetic dissociation of heavy ions has been added along with the extension of the interaction models for some nuclide pairs to energies below 100 MeV/A using the BME approach, as well as the development of an improved QMD model for intermediate energies. Both DPMJET 2.53 and 3 remain available along with rQMD 2.4 for heavy ion interactions above 100 MeV/A. Technical improvements include the ability to use parentheses in setting up the combinatorial geometry, the introduction of pre-processor directives in the input stream. a new random number generator with full 64 bit randomness, new routines for mathematical special functions (adapted from SLATEC). Finally, work is progressing on the deployment of a user-friendly GUI input interface as well as a CAD-like geometry creation and visualization tool. On the application front, FLUKA has been used to extensively evaluate the potential space radiation effects on astronauts for future deep space missions, the activation dose for beam target areas, dose calculations for radiation therapy as well as being adapted for use in the simulation of events in the ALICE detector at the LHC.

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V. Patera

Sapienza University of Rome

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M. Marafini

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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I. Mattei

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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A. Sarti

Sapienza University of Rome

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A. Sciubba

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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C. Voena

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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E. De Lucia

Sapienza University of Rome

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R. Faccini

Sapienza University of Rome

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