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physical resources & facilities
GENERAL
- Student offices with individual desks and personal computer
- Student lab coats and radiation badges
- Medical Physics Program administrative support office
LIBRARIES
- Department of Physics and Astronomy library
- Medical physics library in Program Office and at Cancer Center
- LSU University Libraries
CLINICAL FACILITIES at MARY BIRD PERKINS CANCER CENTER
- Treatment Delivery Systems
- 5 Varian Clinac Radiotherapy accelerators with Millenium MLC (4,
6, 10, 15, 18 MV x-ray and 6, 9, 12, 16, and 20 MeV electron beams)
- BrainLab Novalis stereotactic radiotherapy system
- TomoTherapy Hi-Art System
- Patient Data Systems
- GE Lighspeed RT CT Simulator (4D Advantage Windows)
- GE Discovery ST PET-C
- IMPAC record and verify system
- Treatment Planning Systems
- Philips ADAC Pinnacle3 systems (13)
- 9 - Baton Rouge
- 2 - Hammond
- 2 - Covington
- Philips ADAC Pinnacle3 systems (Research Server)
- TomoTherapy planning station (Clinical)
- TomoTherapy planning station (Research)
- BrainLab stereotactic system (iPlan)
- K&S Diamond MU Software
- MU Check Software
- Brachytherapy Systems
- Varian VariSource HDR system
- Varian VariSeed LDR planning system (prostate seeds)
- Sr-90 ophthalmic applicator
- I-125 eye plaques for ocular melanoma
- Dosimetry Lab
- 3D beam scanning system (Welhoffer/Scanditronix)
- 2D beam scanning systems (Scanditronix, TomoDose, CRS)
- Cylindrical water phantoms
- TLD in-vivo dosimetry system
- Radiographic Film scanning system (Vidar scanner, RIT and TomoScan
software)
- Radiochromic Film scanning system (Epson scanner, Image Acquisition,
and Film QA software)
- Tissue equivalent phantoms (rectangular, cylindrical, and 4D)
- Sun Nuclear (1D (Profiler) and 2D (MapCheck) diode arrays)
- Patient Support Labs/QA Systems
- Treatment planning room
- Block and mold room
RESEARCH FACILITIES
Mary
Bird Perkins Cancer Center: Most of the equipment
used for patient care during the day (listed above for clinical training),
is available for research at nights and on weekends.
CAMD
Synchrotron Radiation Facility: The 1.3 GeV
electron storage ring (200 MA) has multiple beam lines of varying light
energy. Two beam lines, produced by a superconducting wiggler magnet,
allow medical radiological research using x-ray beams up to 40 keV.
Radiation Detector Development
Lab: The Radiation Detector Development (RDD) Laboratory
currently provides 480 sq. ft. of research space and is located in the
renovated Nicholson Hall (which houses the Department of Physics and
Astronomy); the lab occupies an additional 300 sq. ft. of lab space in
the Nuclear Science building, which is rated for full use of radioactive
materials. The RDD Lab has equipment and materials for design, fabrication,
testing, and analysis of prototype detector systems. This includes: oscilloscopes;
PC-based multi-channel analyzer; UNIX workstation for simulations, data
processing and analysis; electronics prototyping equipment; dose calibrator;
sealed long-lived radiation sources and collimation/shielding materials;
general-purpose collection of nuclear instrumentation modular electronics;
general-purpose collection of scintillation crystals and photomultiplier
tubes (PMT); and imaging phantoms. Some project-specific items that are
available include a light-tight ("black") box, a selection of wavelength-shifting
optical fibers (both individual fibers and assembled ribbons), three
5"x5"x1" NaI(Tl) scintillation crystals, a multi-channel PMT, green-enhanced-response
PMTs, custom-built detector assembly fixtures, and multi-channel DAQ
cards.
Micro-CT Imaging System: Skyscan 1074 instrument with 37 μm
resolution, 3 cm field of view and variable beam energy. Image reconstruction
software has multiple capabilities and can run on a distributed computing
environment.
Design and Construction Shops: The
Department of Physics and Astronomy provides fully-staffed machine and electronics
shops. These shops provide in-house fabrication facilities. In
addition, a "student" machine shop is also available for faculty and student
use. Other resources include a drafting shop operated by the College
of Basic Sciences.
Animal Irradiation Facilities: The
School of Veterinary Medicine supports radiological facilities for animals. Diagnostic
facilities include x-ray fluoroscopy and CT scanning, and access to a PET/CT. MRI
capability is anticipated in the near future. A small animal therapy
facility includes a Varian Clinac 600C with a 52-leaf MLC and the Pinnacle
treatment planning system.
Computing Facilities:
- Various multi-teraflop systems, including Tezpur (15 Tflop, 360 node)
and Pelican (3Tflop, 32 node), operated by the Center for Computation and
Technology.
- Linux cluster for student use, operated by the Department of Physics
and Astronomy;
- The Medical Physics and Health Physics Program has several high-performance
multi-processor Unix workstations for research and instructional purposes
with the following software:
- Philips ADAC Pinnacle3 research treatment planning system;
- TomoTherapy research treatment planning system;
- EGSnrc MCNP (various versions), and GEANT Monte Carlo codes;
- A collection of deterministic neutron, photon and charge particle
transport codes including cross section processing routines;
- Fortran CC+ compilers with high-performance multi-threading extension;
- In-house software for advanced aerosol transport computations,
external beam photon transport calculations, and brachytherapy seed
identification and dosimetry.
Nuclear Science Building: The
Nuclear Science Building serves primarily as a laboratory research and teaching
facility. In addition, it gives housing to the LSU campus Radiation Safey
Office. The building houses:
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Six research laboratories equipped with fume hoods,
sinks, counters, storage space. All are all acid-proof and are
rated for radiochemistry, radiobiology, nano-sized aerosol, and generic
radiation research. The aerosol laboratory houses a 1.8x1.5x0.6
m3 environmental chamber equipped with a real-time laser multi-channel
aerosol spectrometer and nano-particle nebulizer. This lab supports experimental
and computational study of how aerosols transport in confined spaces.
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Multiple irradiation facilities (high-intensity radio-isotopic
source irradiators having a maximum dose rate of 5000 R/min include):
self-contained Co-60 irradiator, pool-type Co-60 irradiator, and Eberline
Cs-137 calibrator/irradiator. Neutron facilities include: a subcritical
assembly for neutron physics experiments and Cf-252 sources (total isotope
mass of about 60 micro-grams) stored in two separate neutron irradiators
(scalar thermal neutron flux of about 5E6 n/cm2/s).
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Multiple radiation detection systems: HPGe detectors,
NaI(Tl) detectors, a Si(Li) detector, liquid scintillation detector,
etc. Counting laboratories maintain a cross-calibration schedule
with the State of Louisiana Radiation Laboratory under the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality, using NIST traceable standards.
Last updated: November 26, 2008
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