You're a Spin-1/2 Baryon. How Do You Feel About That?

Proton Therapy – Cost and Benefit

[T]he current question on whether patients do benefit from it better than conventional, less-costly treatment.

‘Proton therapy’ was one answer to the “what good is it?” question of physics when I was working at TRIUMF, and explaining the benefit of basic research wasn’t an option.

Proton therapy is the use of protons to destroy tumors or cancerous cells in a way that is more targeted than other treatments like chemotherapy or EM radiation; I can’t really get into the medical subtleties (dammit, Jim, I’m a physicist, not a physician!). EM radiation will attenuate as it goes onto the body, so if the target is below the surface, you’ll get more energy deposited in the healthy tissue in front of the target. Charged particles lose energy, by ionizing atoms or molecules, in proportion to their speed — faster moving particles don’t spend much time interacting with a given atom — and so as they slow, they are able to deposit more energy. This compounding effect means they deposit a large fraction of their energy in a small region, and the penetration depth where this occurs can be tuned, as it’s proportional to the incident kinetic energy.

So you do far less damage to the surrounding healthy tissue. The question, in Zapperz’s link, is whether that translates into an overall better response of the patients, and a cost/benefit analysis.

Here is a somewhat more detailed explanation of the physics, including a dose vs depth graph for EM, protons and protons with a modulated energy source to spread out the Bragg peak. Protons have an advantage over electrons for this type of treatment: because they are much more massive, they have a much greater tendency to forward-scatter and reach the target.

Barkeep, Another Round

James Cronen discusses The Physics of Glassware

To put it terribly analytically, a glass is a potential well. When you pour a liquid into a glass and it comes to rest, the molecules don’t have enough total energy to make it out of the bowl of the glass. They stay there until they get enough energy to leave, or the walls around them disappear. This happens by one of three mechanisms.

So this isn’t a discussion of whether glass is a liquid, it’s a physics take on the functionality of glassware. And it’s purely a classical one:

Quantum wine in a potential well might leak out of the sides of the glass due to the process called quantum tunneling. Classical wine has no such problem. More on that some other time.

Some of my glassware is beakers I bought years ago and put on the bar, because the parties my housemates and I threw weren’t geeky enough. I also have roly glasses in case any weebils come over for cocktails (and want to get almost-falling-down drunk)

roly glass