Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO:
KRS 211.840,
211.842-211.852,
211.990(4),
10
C.F.R. 20.1003-20.1005,
NCRP Report 141,
42 U.S.C.
2011 et seq.
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY:
KRS
211.844 authorizes the Cabinet for Health and
Family Services to provide by administrative regulation for the registration
and licensing of the possession or use of sources of ionizing or electronic
product radiation and the handling and disposal of radioactive waste. The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) approves or denies Kentucky's program for
regulating radioactive materials after the effective date of administrative
regulations within 902 KAR Chapter 100. The federal guidance manual,
Compatibility Categories and Health and Safety Identification for NRC
Regulations and Other Program Elements - SA - 200, issued June 5, 2009,
provides parameters states shall follow in order for approval. The parameters
include the provision that definitions shall be identical to NRC definitions.
This administrative regulation establishes definitions for 902 KAR Chapter
100.
Section 1. Definitions.
(1) "A1" and "A2":
(a) "A1" means the maximum activity of
special form radioactive material permitted in a Type A package;
(b) "A2" means the maximum activity of
radioactive material, other than special form radioactive material, LSA, and
SCO material, permitted in a Type A package;
(c) These values are listed in 10 C.F.R. 71,
Appendix A, or may be derived under the procedure prescribed in 10 C.F.R. 71
Appendix A.
(2)
"Absorbed dose" means the energy imparted by ionizing radiation per unit mass
of irradiated material. The units of absorbed dose are the rad and the gray
(Gy).
(3) "Accelerator" means a
machine capable of accelerating electrons, protons, deuterons, or other charged
particles in a vacuum and of discharging the resultant particulate or other
radiation into a medium at energies usually in excess of one (1) MeV, such as
the cyclotron, synchrotron, synchrocyclotron, betatron, linear accelerator, and
Van de Graaff electrostatic generator.
(4) "Accessible surface" means the external
surface of the enclosure or housing provided by the manufacturer.
(5) "Act" means the "Kentucky Radiation
Control Act of 1978", as established in
KRS
211.840.
(6) "Activity" means the rate of
disintegration (transformation) or decay of radioactive material. The units of
activity are the curie (Ci) and the becquerel (Bq).
(7) "Address of use" means the building or
buildings that are identified on the license and where radioactive material may
be received, used or stored.
(8)
"Adult" means an individual eighteen (18) or more years of age.
(9) "Agreement state" means a state with
which the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission or the United States
Atomic Energy Commission has entered into an effective agreement under
subsection 274 b. of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, 42 U.S.C. 200 et seq., as
amended (73 Stat. 689).
(10)
"Airborne radioactive material" means radioactive material dispersed in the air
in the form of dusts, fumes, particulates, mists, vapors, or gases.
(11) "Airborne radioactivity area" means a
room, enclosure, or area in which airborne radioactive material, composed
wholly or partly of radioactive material, exists in concentrations:
(a) In excess of the derived air
concentrations specified in 10 C.F.R. 20 Appendix B; or
(b) That an individual present in the area
without respiratory protective equipment may exceed an intake of six-tenths
(0.6) percent of the annual limit on intake or twelve (12) DAC hours.
(12) "Air kerma (K)" means the
kinetic energy released in air by ionizing radiation. Kerma is determined as
the quotient of dE by dM, where dE is the sum of the initial kinetic energies
of all the charged ionizing particles liberated by uncharged ionizing particles
in air of mass dM. The SI unit of air kerma is joule per kilogram and the
special name for the unit of kerma is the gray (Gy).
(13) "Air-purifying respirator" means a
respirator with an air-purifying filer, cartridge, or canister that removes
specific air contaminants by passing ambient air through the air-purifying
element.
(14) "Alert" means the
notice given when an event may occur, is in progress, or has occurred that may
lead to a release of radioactive material, but the release is not expected to
require a response by an off-site response organization in order to protect
persons offsite.
(15) "Aluminum
equivalent" means the thickness of type 1100 aluminum, which is composed of at
least ninety-nine (99.0) percent aluminum, 0.12 percent copper, affording the
same attenuation, under specified conditions, as the material for which it is
substituted.
(16) "Analytical x-ray
system" means a system which utilizes x-rays for the examination of the
structure of materials, such as x-ray diffraction and spectrographic
equipment.
(17) "Annual limit on
intake" or "ALI" means the derived limit for the amount of radioactive material
taken into the body of an adult worker by inhalation or ingestion in a year.
ALI is the smaller value of annual intake of a given radionuclide by the
reference man that would result in:
(a) A
committed effective dose equivalent of five (5) rems, or 0.05 Sv; or
(b) A committed dose equivalent of fifty (50)
rems, or five-tenths (0.5) Sv, to an individual organ or tissue. ALI values for
intake by ingestion and by inhalation of selected radionuclides are established
in 10 C.F.R. 20 Appendix B.
(18) "Area of use" means a portion of a
physical structure that has been set aside for the purpose of receiving, using
or storing radioactive material.
(19) "As low as reasonably achievable" or
"ALARA" means making every reasonable effort to maintain exposures to radiation
as far below the dose limits established in
902 KAR
100:019 as practical, consistent with the purpose for
which the licensed activity is undertaken. ALARA shall take into account the
state of technology, the economics of improvement in relation to benefits to
the public health and safety, and other societal and socioeconomic
considerations, in relation to the utilization of nuclear energy and
radioactive materials in the public interest.
(20) "Assigned protection factor" or "APF"
means the expected workplace level of respirator protection that would be
provided by a properly functioning respirator or a class of respirators to
properly fitted and trained users. Operationally, the inhaled concentration may
be estimated by dividing the ambient airborne concentration by the
APF.
(21) "Atmosphere-supplying
respirator" means a respirator that supplies the respirator user with breathing
air from a source independent of the ambient atmosphere, and includes
sup-plied-air respirators (SARs) and self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA)
units.
(22) "Attenuation" means the
reduction of exposure rate upon passage of radiation through matter.
(23) "Attenuation block" means a block or
stack, having dimensions twenty (20) centimeters by twenty (20) centimeters by
three and eight-tenths (3.8) centimeters, of type 1100 aluminum alloy or other
materials having equivalent attenuation.
(24) "Authorized medical physicist" means an
individual who:
(a) Meets the requirements in
902 KAR
100:072, Sections (63) and 65(1); or
(b) Is identified as an authorized medical
physicist or teletherapy physicist on:
1. A
specific medical use licensee issued by the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, or an agreement state;
2. A medical use permit issued by a U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission master material licensee;
3. A permit issued by the cabinet, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or an agreement state broad scope medical use
licensee; or
4. A permit issued by
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission master material license broad scope
medical use permittee.
(25) "Authorized nuclear pharmacist" means a
pharmacist who:
(a) Meets the requirements in
902 KAR
100:072, Sections 63 and 66(1);
(b) Is identified as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist on a:
1. Specific license issued by
the cabinet, state, or U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission that authorizes the
medical use or the practice of nuclear pharmacy;
2. Permit issued by a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission master material licensee that authorizes medical use or the practice
of nuclear pharmacy;
3. Permit
issued by the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or agreement state
broad scope medical use licensee that authorizes medical use or the practice of
nuclear pharmacy; or
4. Permit
issued by a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission master material license broad
scope medical use permittee that authorizes medical use or the practice of
nuclear pharmacy;
(c) Is
identified as an authorized nuclear pharmacist by a commercial nuclear pharmacy
that has been authorized to identify authorized nuclear pharmacists;
or
(d) Is designated as an
authorized nuclear pharmacist under
902
KAR 100:058, Section 9(2)(c).
(26) "Authorized user" means a physician,
dentist, or podiatrist who:
(a) Meets the
requirements in
902 KAR
100:072, Sections 63 and 68(1), 69(1), 70(1), 71(1),
72(1), 74(1), 76(1), or 77(1); or
(b) Is identified as an authorized user on:
1. The cabinet's, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission's, or an agreement state's license that authorizes the medical use
of radioactive material;
2. A
permit issued by a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission master material licensee
that is authorized to permit the medical use of radioactive material;
3. A permit issued by the cabinet, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or agreement state licensee of broad scope that
is authorized to permit the medical use of radioactive material; or
4. A permit issued by a U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission master material license broad scope permittee that is
authorized to permit the medical use of radioactive material.
(27) "Automatic
exposure control" means a device that automatically controls one (1) or more
technique factors in order to obtain, at a preselected location, a required
quantity of radiation.
(28)
"Background radiation" means radiation not under the control of the licensee,
including:
(a) From cosmic sources;
(b) Naturally occurring radioactive
materials;
(c) Radon that is not a
decay product of source or special nuclear material; and
(d) Global fallout as it exists in the
environment from the testing of nuclear explosive devices or from past nuclear
accidents. Background radiation shall not include radiation from radioactive
materials regulated by the Cabinet for Health and Family Services.
(29) "Beam axis" means the axis of
rotation of the beam limiting device.
(30) "Beam limiting device" or "collimator"
means a device that provides a means to restrict the dimensions of the x-ray
field.
(31) "Beam monitoring
system" means a system designed to detect and measure the radiation present in
the useful beam.
(32) "Beam
scattering foil" means a thin piece of material (usually metallic) placed in
the beam to scatter a beam of electrons in order to provide a more uniform
electron distribution in the useful beam.
(33) "Becquerel" means a unit, in the
International System of Units (SI), of measurement of radioactivity equal to
one (1) transformation per second.
(34) "Bioassay" or "radiobioassay" means the
determination of kinds, quantities or concentrations, and, in some cases, the
locations of radioactive material in the human body, by direct measurement (in
vivo counting) or by analysis and evaluation of materials excreted or removed
from the human body.
(35)
"Brachytherapy" means a method of radiation therapy in which an encapsulated
source or group of sources is utilized to deliver radiation at a distance to a
few centimeters, by surface, intracavitary, or interstitial
application.
(36) "Broker" or
"waste broker" means a person who takes possession of low-level waste solely
for the purposes of consolidation and shipment.
(37) "By-product material" means:
(a) 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;
or
(b) The tailings or wastes
produced by the extraction or concentration of uranium or thorium from ore
processed primarily for its source material content, including discrete surface
wastes resulting from uranium solution extraction processes. Underground ore
bodies depleted by these solution extraction operations shall not constitute
by-product material within this definition.
(38) "Cabinet" means Cabinet for Health
Services, or its duly authorized representatives.
(39) "Cabinet radiography" means industrial
radiography conducted in an enclosure or cabinet shielded so that radiation
levels at every location on the exterior meet the limitations specified in
902 KAR
100:019, Section 11.
(40) "Cabinet x-ray system" means an x-ray
system with the x-ray tube installed or used in a permanent enclosure in which
the enclosure is intended to contain at least that portion of the material
being irradiated, not to include x-ray systems used by licensed practitioners
of the healing arts. The enclosure:
(a) May
be the architectural structure or may be independent of the architectural
structure;
(b) Shall provide
attenuation of the radiation to meet the requirements of
902 KAR 100:105;
and
(c) Shall exclude personnel
from its interior during the generation of x-radiation.
(41) "Calendar quarter" means between twelve
(12) and fourteen (14) consecutive weeks.
(a)
The first calendar quarter of each year shall begin in January and subsequent
calendar quarters shall be arranged so that no day is included in more than one
(1) calendar quarter and no day in a one (1) year period is omitted from
inclusion within a calendar quarter.
(b) A licensee or registrant shall not change
the method observed of determining calendar quarters, except at the beginning
of a calendar year.
(42)
"Calibration" means the determination of:
(a)
The response or reading of an instrument relative to a series of known
radiation values over the range of the instrument; or
(b) The strength of a source of radiation
relative to a standard.
(43) "Carrier" is defined by
KRS
174.405(1).
(44) "Cephalometric device" means a device
intended for the radiographic visualization and measurement of the dimensions
of the human head.
(45)
"Certificate holder" means a person who has been issued a certificate of
compliance or other package approval by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
(46) "Certificate of
Compliance" or "CoC" means the certificate issued by the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission under 10 C.F.R. Part 71 , which approves the design of a
package for the transportation of radioactive material.
(47) "Certified cabinet x-ray system" means
an x-ray system that has been certified pursuant to
21
C.F.R. 1010.2 as being manufactured and
assembled according to the provisions of
21 C.F.R.
1020.40.
(48) "Certified component" means a component
of an x-ray system subject to 21 C.F.R. Subchapter J.
(49) "Certified system" means an x-ray system
that has one (1) or more certified component.
(50) "C.F.R." means Code of Federal
Regulations.
(51) "Changeable
filters" means a filter, exclusive of inherent filtration, which can be removed
from the useful beam through an electronic, mechanical, or physical
process.
(52) "Chemical
description" means a description of the principal chemical characteristics of a
low-level radioactive waste.
(53)
"Class" or "lung class" or "inhalation class" means a classification scheme for
inhaled material according to its rate of clearance from the pulmonary region
of the lung. Materials shall be classified as D, W, or Y, which applies to a
range of clearance half-times:
(a) For Class D
(Days) of less than ten (10) days;
(b) For Class W (Weeks) from ten (10) to 100
days; and
(c) For Class Y (Years)
of greater than 100 days.
(54) "Close reflection by water" means
immediate contact by water of sufficient thickness for maximum reflection of
neutrons.
(55) "Collective dose"
means the sum of the individual doses received in a given period of time by a
specified population from exposure to a specified source of
radiation.
(56) "Collimator" means
a device used to limit the size, shape, and direction of the primary radiation
beam.
(57) "Commission" means the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or its duly authorized
representatives.
(58) "Committed
dose equivalent (Ht,50)" means
the dose equivalent to organs or tissues of reference (T) that will be received
from an intake of radioactive material by an individual during the fifty (50)
year period following the intake.
(59) "Committed effective dose equivalent
(He,50)" means the sum of the products of the weighting factors applicable to
each of the body organs or tissues that are irradiated and the committed dose
equivalent to these organs or tissues
(HE,50
={WTHT,50).
(60) "Computer-readable medium" means the
cabinet's computer can transfer the information from the medium into its
memory.
(61) "Computed tomography"
or "CT" means the production of a tomogram by the acquisition and computer
processing of x-ray transmission data.
(62) "Consignee" means the designated
receiver of the shipment of low-level radioactive waste.
(63) "Consignment" means each shipment of a
package or groups of packages or load of radioactive material officered by a
shipper for transport.
(64)
"Constraint" or "dose constraint" means a value above which specified licensee
actions are required.
(65) "Contact
therapy system" means an x-ray system used for therapy with the x-ray tube port
placed in contact with or within five (5) centimeters of the surface being
treated.
(66) "Containment system"
means the assembly of components of the package intended to retain the
radioactive material during transport.
(67) "Controlled area" means an area, outside
of a restricted area but inside the site boundary, to which access can be
limited by the licensee or registrant for a stated reason.
(68) "Cooling curve" means the graphical
relationship between heat units stored and cooling time.
(69) "Conveyance" means:
(a) For transport by public highway or rail,
a transport vehicle or large freight container;
(b) For transport by water, a vessel or a
hold, compartment, or defined deck area of a vessel including a transport
vehicle on board the vessel; or
(c)
Transportation by an aircraft.
(70) "Critical group" means the group of
individuals reasonably expected to receive the greatest exposure to residual
radioactivity for any applicable set of circumstances.
(71) "Criticality Safety Index" or "CSI",
means the dimensionless number, rounded up to the next tenth, assigned to and
placed on the label of a fissile material package, to designate the degree of
control of accumulation of packages containing fissile material during
transportation. Determination of the criticality safety index is described in
10 C.F.R.
71.22,
71.23,
and
71.59.
(72) "Curie" means a quantity of
radioactivity.
(a) One (1) curie (Ci) is that
quantity of radioactive material that decays at the rate of 3.7 x
1010 disintegrations per second (dps).
(b) Commonly used submultiples of the curie
are the millicurie and the microcurie.
1. One
(1) millicurie (mCi) = 0.001 curie = 3.7 x 107
dps.
2. One (1) microcurie (uCi) =
0.000001 curie = 3.7 x 104 dps.
(73) "Dead man switch" means a
switch so constructed that a circuit closing contact can be maintained only by
continuous pressure on the switch by the operator.
(74) "Declared pregnant woman" means a woman
who has voluntarily informed the licensee, in writing, of her pregnancy and the
estimated date of conception. The declaration remains in effect until the
declared pregnant woman withdraws the declaration in writing or is no longer
pregnant.
(75) "Decommission" means
the:
(a) Safe removal from service of a
facility or site;
(b) Termination
of license; and
(c) Reduction of
residual radioactivity to a level permitting release of the property:
1. For unrestricted use; or
2. Under restricted conditions.
(76) "Decontamination
facility" means a facility operating under the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, or an agreement state license whose principal purpose is
decontamination of equipment or materials to accomplish recycle, reuse, or
other waste management objectives, and is not considered to be a consignee for
LLW shipments.
(77) "Dedicated
check source" means a radioactive source that is used to assure the constant
operation of a radiation detection or measurement device over several months or
years. The source may also be used for other purposes.
(78) "Deep-dose equivalent (Hd)" which
applies to external whole-body exposure, means the dose equivalent at a tissue
depth of one (1) centimeter (cm) (1000
mg/cm2).
(79) "Demand respirator" means an
atmosphere-supplying respirator that admits breathing air to the facepiece only
when a negative pressure is created inside the facepiece by
inhalation.
(80) "Derived air
concentration" or "DAC" means the concentration of a given radionuclide in air
which, if breathed by the reference man for a working year of 2,000 hours under
conditions of light work, results in an intake of one (1) ALI.
(a) "Light work" produces an inhalation rate
of one and two-tenths (1.2) cubic meters (1.2m3) of
air per hour.
(b) DAC values are
given in 10 C.F.R., 20 Appendix B.
(81) "Derived air concentration-hour" or
"DAC-hour" means the product of the concentration of radioactive material in
air, expressed as a fraction or multiple of the derived air concentration for
each radionuclide, and the time of exposure to that radionuclide, in hours. A
licensee may take 2,000 DAC-hours to represent one (1) ALI, equivalent to a
committed effective dose equivalent of five (5) rems (0.05 Sv).
(82) "Deuterium" means deuterium and any
deuterium compounds, including heavy water, in which the ratio of deuterium
atoms to hydrogen atoms exceeds 1:5000.
(83) "Diagnostic clinical procedure manual"
means the collection of written procedures, methods, instructions, and
precautions by which the licensee performs diagnostic clinical procedures,
where each diagnostic clinical procedure:
(a)
Has been approved by the authorized user; and
(b) Includes the radiopharmaceutical name,
dosage, and route of administration.
(84) "Diagnostic source assembly" means the
tube housing assembly with a beam-limiting device attached.
(85) "Diagnostic-type protective tube
housing" means an x-ray tube housing so constructed that the leakage radiation
measured at a distance of one (1) meter from the source cannot exceed 100
milliroentgens in one (1) hour if the tube is operated at its maximum
continuous rated current for the maximum tube potential.
(86) "Diagnostic x-ray system" means an x-ray
system designed for irradiation of a part of the human body for the purpose of
diagnosis or visualization.
(87)
"Direct scatter radiation" means that scattered radiation that has been
deviated in direction only by materials irradiated by the useful beam. (See
also "scattered radiation").
(88)
"Disposable container" means a container principally used to confine low-level
radioactive waste during disposal operations at a land disposal facility. (See
also "high integrity container".) For some shipments, the disposal container
may be transport package.
(89)
"Disposable respirator" means a respirator for which maintenance is not
intended and that is designed to be discarded after excessive breathing
resistance, sorbent exhaustion, physical damage, or end-of-service-life renders
it unsuitable for use. Disposal respirator may include, but not limit to a
disposable half-mask respirator or a disposable escape-only self-contained
breathing apparatus (SCBA).
(90)
"Disposal" means the disposition of waste as authorized by
902 KAR
100:021.
(91) "Distinguishable from background" means
that the detectable concentration of a radio-nuclide is statistically different
from the background concentrations of that radionuclide in the vicinity of the
site or, in the case of structures, in similar materials using adequate
measurements technology, survey, and statistical techniques.
(92) "Dose" or "radiation dose" means:
(a) Absorbed dose;
(b) Dose equivalent;
(c) Effective dose equivalent;
(d) Committed dose equivalent;
(e) Committed effective dose equivalent;
or
(f) Total effective dose
equivalent.
(93) "Dose
commitment" means the total radiation dose to a part of the body that results
from retention in the body of radioactive material. Estimation assumes the
period of exposure to retained material to be less than fifty (50)
years.
(94) "Dose equivalent (Ht)"
means the product of the absorbed dose in tissue, the quality factor, and other
necessary modifying factors at the location of interest. The units of dose
equivalent are the rem and sievert (Sv).
(95) Dose monitor unit (DMU)" means a unit
response from the beam monitoring system from which the absorbed dose can be
calculated.
(96) "Dosimetry
processor" means an individual or an organization that processes and evaluates
individual monitoring equipment in order to determine the radiation dose
delivered to the equipment.
(97)
"DOT" means the U.S. Department of Transportation.
(98) "Effective dose equivalent (He)" means
the sum of the products of the dose equivalent to the organ or tissue (Ht) and
the weighting factors (Wt) applicable to each of the body organs or tissues
that are irradiated (He =
WtHt).
(99) "Embryo or fetus" means the developing
human organism from conception until the time of birth.
(100) "Energy compensation source or "ECS"
means a small sealed source, with an activity not exceeding 100 microcuries
(3.7 MBq), used within a logging tool, or other tool components, to provide a
reference standard to maintain the tool's calibration when in use.
(101) "Entrance or access point" means a
location through which an individual may gain access to a radiation area or
radioactive material, including an entry or exit portal of sufficient size to
permit human entry, irrespective of its intended use.
(102) "Entrance exposure rate" means the
roentgens per unit time at the point the center of the useful beam enters the
patient.
(103) "Environmental
Protection Agency "EPA" Identification number" means the number received by a
transporter following application to the EPA as required by 40 C.F.R. Part
263.
(104) "Exclusive use" means
the sole use of a conveyance by a single consignor in which initial,
intermediate, and final loading and unloading are carried out under the
direction of the consignor or consignee.
(a)
Consignor and carrier shall each ensure that loading and unloading is performed
by personnel having radiological training and resources appropriate for safe
handling of the consignment.
(b)
Consignor shall include with the shipping paper information provided to the
carrier, specific written instructions for maintenance of exclusive use
shipment controls.
(105)
"Exposure" means being exposed to ionizing radiation or to radioactive
material.
(106) "Exposure rate"
means the exposure per unit of time.
(107) "External beam radiation therapy" means
therapeutic irradiation in which the source of radiation is at a distance from
the body.
(108) "External dose"
means that portion of the dose equivalent received from radiation sources
outside the body.
(109) "Extremity"
means hand, elbow, arm below the elbow, foot, knee, or leg below the
knee.
(110) "Eye dose equivalent".
See "lens dose equivalent".
(111)
"Facility" means a location at which one (1) or more devices or sources are
installed or located within one (1) building, vehicle, or under one (1) roof,
under the same administrative control.
(112) "Field emission equipment" means
equipment which uses an x-ray tube in which electron emission from the cathode
is due solely to the action of an electric field.
(113) "Field-flattening filter" means a
filter used to homogenize the absorbed dose rate over the radiation
field.
(114) "Field station" means
a facility where radioactive sources may be stored or used and from which
equipment is dispatched to temporary job sites.
(115) "Filter" means the material in the
useful beam which usually absorbs preferentially the less penetrating
radiations.
(a) "Inherent filtration" means
the filter permanently in the useful beam. It includes the window of the x-ray
tube and the permanent tube enclosure.
(b) "Added filter" means the filter added to
the inherent filtration.
(c) "Total
filter" means the sum of the inherent and added filters.
(116) "Filtering facepiece (dust mask)" means
a negative pressure particulate respirator with a filter as an integral part of
the facepiece or with the entire facepiece composed of the filtering medium,
not equipped with elastomeric sealing surfaces and adjustable straps.
(117)
(a)
"Fissile material" means the:
1. Radionuclides
uranium-233, uranium-235, plutonium-239, and plutonium-241, or any combination
of these radionuclides; and
2.
Fissile nuclides themselves, not material containing fissile
nuclides.
(b) Fissile
material does not include unirradiated natural and depleted uranium; and
natural or depleted uranium that has been irradiated in thermal reactors
only;
(c) Fissile material also
excludes certain controls as provided in
10 C.F.R.
71.15.
(118) "Fissile material package" means a
fissile material packaging together with its fissile material
contents.
(119) "Fit factor" means
a quantitative estimate of the fit of a particular respirator to a specific
individual, and typically estimates the ratio of the concentration of a
substance in ambient air to its concentration inside the respirator while
worn.
(120) "Fit test" means the
use of a protocol to qualitatively or quantitatively evaluate the fit of a
respirator on an individual.
(121)
"Fluoroscopic imaging assembly" means a component that comprises a reception
system in which x-ray photons produce a fluoroscopic image. It includes
equipment housings, electrical interlocks if present, the primary protective
barrier, and structural material providing linkage between the image receptor
and the diagnostic source assembly.
(122) "Focal spot" means the area projected
on the anode of the x-ray tube by the electrons accelerated from the cathode
and from which the useful beam originates.
(123) "Former U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
(AEC) or U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) licensed facilities" means
nuclear reactors, nuclear fuel reprocessing plants, uranium enrichment plants,
or critical mass experimental facilities where AEC or NRC licenses have been
terminated.
(124) "Gantry" means
that part of a radiation producing machine supporting and allowing movements of
the radiation head about a center of rotation.
(125) "General purpose radiographic x-ray
system" means a radiographic x-ray system which, by design, is not limited to
radiographic examination of specific anatomical regions.
(126) "Generally applicable environmental
radiation standards" means standards issued by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) under the authority of
42 U.S.C. sec.
2011 et seq., that impose limits on radiation
exposures or levels, or concentrations or quantities of radioactive material,
in the general environment outside the boundaries of locations under the
control of persons possessing or using radioactive material.
(127) "Generator" or means a licensee
operating under the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement
state who:
(a) Is a waste generator as defined
in this administrative regulation; or
(b) Is the licensee to whom waste can be
attributed within the context of the Low Level Radioactive Waste Policy
Amendments Act of 1985, such as, waste generated as a result of decontamination
or recycle activities.
(128) "Gonad shield" means a protective
barrier for the testes or ovaries.
(129) "Graphite" means graphite with a boron
equivalent content less than five (5) parts per million and density greater
than one and five-tenths (1.5) grams per cubic centimeter.
(130) "Gray" or "Gy" means the SI unit of
absorbed dose. One (1) gray equals an absorbed dose of one (1) Joule/kilogram
(100 rads).
(131) "Half-value
layer" or "HVL" means the thickness of specified material which attenuates the
beam of radiation to one-half (1/2) of its original air kerma rate, exposure
rate or absorbed dose rate. This excludes the contribution of scattered
radiation, other than that which might be present initially in the beam
concerned.
(132) "Healing arts
screening" means the testing of human beings using x-ray machines for the
detection or evaluation of health indications if these tests are not
specifically and individually ordered by a licensed practitioner of the healing
arts legally authorized to prescribe these x-ray tests for the purpose of
diagnosis or treatment.
(133) "Heat
unit" means a unit of energy equal to the product of the peak kilovoltage,
milliamperes, and seconds.
(134)
"Helmet" means a rigid respiratory inlet covering that also provides head
protection against impact and penetration.
(135) "High integrity container or "HIC"
means a container commonly designated to meet the structural stability
requirements of
10 C.F.R.
61.56, and to meet the U.S. Department of
Transportation requirements for a Type A package.
(136) "High radiation area" means an area,
accessible to individuals, in which radiation levels from radiation sources
external to the body may result in an individual receiving a dose equivalent in
excess of one-tenth (0.1) rem (1m Sv) in one (1) hour at thirty (30)
centimeters from the radiation source or thirty (30) centimeters from a surface
that the radiation penetrates.
(137) "Hood" means a respiratory inlet
covering that completely covers the head and neck and may also cover portions
of the shoulders and torso.
(138)
"Human use" means the internal or external administration of radiation or
radioactive materials to human beings.
(139) "Image intensifier" means a device that
converts instantaneously, by means of photo-emissive surfaces and electronic
circuitry, an x-ray pattern into a light pattern of greater intensity than
would have been produced by the original x-ray pattern.
(140) "Image receptor" means a device that
transforms incident radiation into a visual image or into another form which
can be made into a visual image by further transformations.
(141) "Image receptor support" means, for
mammographic systems, that part of the system designed to support the image
receptor in a horizontal plane during a mammographic examination.
(142) "Individual" means a human
being.
(143) "Individual
monitoring" means the assessment of:
(a) Dose
equivalent by the use of an individual monitoring device;
(b) Committed effective dose equivalent by:
1. Bioassay; or
2. Determination of the time-weighted air
concentrations to which an individual has been exposed; or
(c) Dose equivalent by the use of survey
data.
(144) "Individual
monitoring device" or "individual monitoring equipment" means a device designed
to be worn by a single individual for the assessment of dose equivalent, such
as film badges, thermoluminescence dosimeters (TLDs), pocket ionization
chambers, or personal ("lapel") air sampling devices.
(145) "Industrial radiography" means the
examination of the macroscopic structure of materials by nondestructive methods
utilizing sources of radiation.
(146) "Injection tool" means a device used
for controlled subsurface injection of radioactive tracer material.
(147) "Interlock" means a device preventing
the start or continued operation of equipment unless certain predetermined
conditions prevail.
(148) "Internal
dose" means that portion of the dose equivalent received from radioactive
material taken into the body.
(149)
"Irradiation" means the exposure of matter to ionizing radiation.
(150) "Kilovolt (kV) {kilo electron volt}"
means the energy equal to that acquired by a particle with one (1) electron
charge in passing through a potential difference of 1,000 volts in a vacuum.
(Note: current convention is to use kV for photons and keV for
electrons.)
(151) "Kilovolt peak"
or "kVp" means the crest value in kilovolts of the potential difference of a
pulsating potential generator. If only one-half (1/2) of the wave is used, the
value refers to the useful half of the wave.
(152) "Lead equivalent" means the thickness
of lead affording the same attenuation, under specified conditions, as the
material in question.
(153)
"Leakage radiation" means radiation emanating from the diagnostic or
therapeutic source assembly, except for the useful beam.
(154) "Leakage technique factor" means, with
respect to different tube housing assemblies:
(a) For capacitor energy storage equipment:
the maximum rated number of exposures in an hour for operation at the maximum
rated peak tube potential, with a charge per exposure of ten (10) milliampere
seconds (mAs) or the minimum obtainable from the unit, whichever is
larger.
(b) For field emission
equipment rated for pulsed operation: the maximum rated number of x-ray pulses
in an hour for operation at the maximum rated peak tube potential.
(c) For all other equipment: the maximum
rated continuous tube current for the maximum rated peak tube
potential.
(155) "Lens
dose equivalent" or "LDE" means the external exposure of the lens of the eye,
and is taken as the dose equivalent at a tissue depth of 0.3 centimeter (300
mg/cm2).
(156) "License" means a license issued by the
cabinet under 902 KAR Chapter 100.
(157) "Licensed material" means radioactive
material, source material, or special nuclear material received, possessed,
used, or transferred, under a general or specific license issued by the
cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state.
(158) "Light field" means the area
illuminated by light, simulating the radiation field.
(159) "Limits" or "dose limits"" means the
permissible upper bounds of radiation doses.
(160) "Lixiscope" means a portable
light-intensified imaging device using a sealed source.
(161) "Logging assistant" means an individual
who, under the personal supervision of a logging supervisor:
(a) Handles sealed sources or tracers that
are not in logging tools or shipping containers; or
(b) Uses survey instruments in well-logging
activities.
(162)
"Logging supervisor" means the individual who provides personal supervision of
the utilization of sources of radiation at the well site.
(163) "Logging tool" means a device used
subsurface to perform well-logging.
(164) "Loose-fitting facepiece" means a
respiratory inlet covering that is designed to form a partial seal with the
face.
(165) "Lost or missing
licensed material" means licensed material whose location is unknown. It
includes material that has been shipped but has not reached its destination and
whose location cannot be readily traced in the transportation system.
(166) "Low-level radioactive waste" means
radioactive waste not classified as:
(a)
High-level radioactive waste;
(b)
Transuranic waste;
(c) Spent
nuclear fuel; or
(d) By-product
material as defined in Section 11e(2) of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
42
U.S.C. 2014.
(167) "Low specific activity" or "LSA" means
radioactive material with limited specific activity, which is nonfissile or is
excepted pursuant to
10 C.F.R.
71.15 and that satisfies the descriptions and
limits established in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this subsection.
Shielding materials surrounding the LSA material shall not be considered in
determining the estimated average specific activity of the package contents.
LSA material shall be in one (1) of three (3) groups:
(a) LSA-I:
1. Uranium and thorium ores, uranium or
thorium concentrates of these ores, and other ores containing naturally
occurring radioactive nuclides that are not intended to be processed for the
use of these radionuclides;
2.
Solid unirradiated natural or depleted uranium or natural thorium or their
solid or liquid compounds or mixtures;
3. Radioactive material for which the A2
value is unlimited; or
4. Other
radioactive material in which the activity is distributed throughout and the
estimated average specific activity does not exceed thirty (30) times the value
for exempt material activity concentration determined in 10 C.F.R. 71 Appendix
A.
(b) LSA-II:
1. Water with tritium concentration up to
20.0 curies/liter (0.8 TBq/liter); or
2. Material in which the radioactive material
is distributed throughout, and the average specific activity does not exceed
10-4 A2/gram for solids and gases, and
10-5 A2/gram for liquids.
(c) LSA-III: Solids (e.g., consolidated
wastes, activated materials), excluding powders, that satisfy the requirements
of
10 C.F.R.
71.77 in which:
1. The radioactive material is distributed
throughout a solid or a collection of solid objects;
2. Is essentially uniformly distributed in a
solid compact binding agent (such as concrete, bitumen, ceramic,
etc.);
3. The radioactive material
is relatively insoluble, or it is intrinsically contained in a relatively
insoluble material, so that, even under loss of packaging, the loss of
radioactive material per package by leaching, when placed in water for seven
(7) days, would not exceed 0.1 A2; and the average specific activity of the
solid does not exceed 2 x 10-3 A2/gram;
and
4. The average specific
activity of the solid does not exceed 2 x 10-3
A2/gram.
(168) "Low toxicity alpha emitter" means
natural uranium, depleted uranium, natural thorium, uranium-235, uranium-238,
thorium-232, thorium-228 or thorium-230 when contained in ores or physical or
chemical concentrates or tailings; or alpha emitters with a half-life of less
than ten (10) days.
(169) "mA"
means milliampere.
(170)
"Management" means the chief executive officer or that individual's
designee.
(171) "mAs" means
milliampere second.
(172) "Maximum
normal operating pressure" means the maximum gauge pressure that would develop
in the containment system in a period of one (1) year under the heat condition
specified in 10 C.F.R. Part 71.71(c)(1) , in the absence of venting, external
cooling by an ancillary system, or operational controls during
transport.
(173) "Medical
institution" means an organization in which several medical disciplines are
practiced.
(174) "Medical use"
means the intentional internal or external administration of radioactive
material, or the radiation therefrom, to patients or human research subjects
under the supervision of an authorized user.
(175) "Member of the public" means an
individual except when the individual is receiving an occupational
dose.
(176) "Microscopic analytical
x-ray equipment" means a device which utilizes x-rays for examining the
microscopic structure of materials. This includes x-ray diffraction and
spectrographic equipment.
(177)
"Mineral logging" means logging performed for the purpose of mineral
exploration other than oil or gas.
(178) "Minor" means an individual less than
eighteen (18) years of age.
(179)
"Misadministration" means the administration of:
(a) A radiopharmaceutical dosage greater than
thirty (30) microcuries of sodium iodide I-125 or I-131:
1. Involving the wrong patient or human
research subject or the wrong radiopharmaceutical; or
2. If both the administered dosage differs
from the prescribed dosage by more than twenty (20) percent of the prescribed
dosage and the difference between the administered dosage and prescribe dosage
exceeds thirty (30) microcuries.
(b) A therapeutic radiopharmaceutical dosage,
other than sodium iodide I-125 or I-131:
1.
Involving the wrong patient, human research subject, radiopharmaceutical, or
route of administration; or
2. If
the administered dosage differs from the prescribed dosage by more than twenty
(20) percent of the prescribed dosage.
(c) A gamma stereotactic radiosurgery
radiation dose:
1. Involving the wrong
patient, human research subject, or treatment site; or
2. If the calculated total administered dose
differs from the total prescribed dose by more than ten (10) percent.
(d) A teletherapy radiation dose:
1. Involving the wrong patient, human
research subject, mode of treatment, or treatment site;
2. If the treatment consists of three (3) or
fewer fractions and the calculated total administered dose differs from the
total prescribed dose by more than ten (10) percent;
3. If the calculated weekly administered dose
is thirty (30) percent greater than the weekly prescribed dose; or
4. If the calculated total administered dose
differs from the total prescribed dose by more than twenty (20)
percent.
(e) A
brachytherapy radiation dose:
1. Involving the
wrong patient, human research subject, radioisotope, or treatment site except
for permanent implant seeds that were implanted in the correct site but
migrated outside the treatment site;
2. Involving a sealed source that is
leaking;
3. If, for a temporary
implant, one (1) or more sealed sources are not removed upon completion of the
procedure; or
4. If the calculated
administered dose differs from the prescribed dose by more than twenty (20)
percent.
(f) A
diagnostic radiopharmaceutical dosage, other than quantities greater than
thirty (30) microcuries of sodium iodide I-125 or I-131:
1. Involving the wrong patient, human
research subject, radiopharmaceutical, or route of administration, or if the
administered dosage differs from the prescribed dosage; and
2. If the dose to the patient or human
research subject exceeds five (5) rems effective dose equivalent or fifty (50)
rems dose equivalent to an individual organ.
(180) "Mobile nuclear medicine service" means
the transportation and medical use of radioactive material.
(181) "Monitor unit (MU)" (See "Dose monitor
unit").
(182) "Monitoring" or
"radiation monitoring" or "radiation protection monitoring" means the
measurement of radiation levels, concentrations, surface area concentrations or
quantities of radioactive material and the use of the results of these
measurements to evaluate potential exposures and doses.
(183) "Moving beam radiation therapy" means
radiation therapy with any planned displacement of radiation field or patient
relative to each other, or with any planned change of absorbed dose
distribution. It includes arc, skip, conformal, intensity modulation and
rotational therapy.
(184) "Natural
thorium" means thorium with the naturally occurring distribution of thorium
isotopes; that is, 100 weight percent thorium-232.
(185) "Negative pressure respirator (tight
fitting)" means a respirator in which the air pressure inside the facepiece is
negative during inhalation with respect to the ambient air pressure outside the
respirator.
(186) "Nominal
treatment distance" means:
(a) For electron
irradiation, the distance from the scattering foil, virtual source, or exit
window of the electron beam to the entrance surface of the irradiated object
along the central axis of the useful beam.
(b) For x-ray irradiation, the virtual source
or target to isocenter distance along the central axis of the useful beam. For
non-isocentric equipment, this distance shall be that specified by the
manufacturer.
(187)
"Nonstochastic effect" or "deterministic effect" means a health effect, the
severity of which varies with the dose and for which a threshold is believed to
exist.
(188) "Normal form
radioactive material" means radioactive material that has not been demonstrated
to qualify as "special form radioactive material."
(189) "NRC" means the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or its duly authorized representatives.
(190)
(a)
"NRC Forms 540, 540A, 541, 541A, 542, and 542A" means official NRC forms as
referenced in
902 KAR
100:021.
(b) Licensees need not use originals of these
forms as long as any substitute forms are equivalent to the original
documentation in respect to content, clarity, size, and location of
information.
(c) Upon agreement
between the shipper and consignee, NRC Forms 541, 541A, 542, and 542A may be
completed, transmitted, and stored in electronic media.
(d) The electronic media shall have the
capability for producing legible, accurate, and complete records in the format
of the uniform manifest.
(191) "Occupational dose" means dose received
by an individual in the course of employment in which the individual's assigned
duties for the licensee or registrant involve exposure to sources of radiation,
whether in the possession of the licensee, registrant, or other person.
Occupational dose shall not include dose received:
(a) From background radiation;
(b) As a medical patient;
(c) From voluntary participation in a medical
research program;
(d) As a member
of the public; or
(e) From exposure
to individuals administered radioactive material and released in accordance
with
902 KAR
100:072, Section 27.
(192) "Operating procedures" means detailed
written instructions, such as:
(a) Normal
operation of equipment and movable shielding;
(b) Closing of interlock circuits;
(c) Manipulation of controls;
(d) Radiation monitoring procedures for
personnel and areas;
(e) Testing of
interlocks; and
(f) Recordkeeping
requirements.
(193)
"Output" means the exposure rate, dose rate, or a quantity related in a known
manner to these rates from a teletherapy unit for a specified set of exposure
conditions.
(194) "Package" means
the packaging together with its radioactive contents as presented for
transport:
(a) Fissile material package or
Type AF package, Type BF package, Type B(U)F package, or Type B(M)F package are
all fissile material packaging types together with its fissile material
complete.
(b) Type A package means
a Type A packaging together with its radioactive contents. A Type A package is
defined and shall comply with the DOT regulations in 49 C.F.R. Part
173.
(c) Type B package means a
Type B packaging together with its radioactive contents.
1. On approval, a Type B package design is
designated by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission as B(U) unless the package
has a maximum normal operating pressure of more than 100
pounds/in2 (700 kPa) gauge or a pressure relief
device that would allow the release of radioactive material to the environment
under the tests specified in 10 C.F.R. Part 71.73 (hypothetical accident
conditions), in which case it will receive a designation B(M).
2. B(U) refers to the need for unilateral
approval of international shipments.
3. B(M) refers to the need for multilaterial
approval of international shipments.
4. There is no distinction made in how
packages with these designations might be used in domestic
transportation.
5. To determine
their distinction for international transportation, refer to U.S. Department of
Transportation Regulations in 49 C.F.R. Part 173 .
6. A Type B package approved before September
6, 1983, was designated only as Type B. Limitations on its use are specified in
902
KAR 100:070, Section 7.
(195) "Packaging" means the
assembly of components necessary to ensure compliance with the requirements of
902
KAR 100:070.
(a) It
may consist of one (1) or more receptacles, absorbent materials, spacing
structures, thermal insulation, radiation shielding, and devices for cooling or
absorbing mechanical shocks.
(b)
The vehicle, tie-down system, and auxiliary equipment may be designated as part
of the packaging.
(196)
"Patient" means an individual subjected to healing arts examination, diagnosis,
or treatment.
(197) "Peak tube
potential" means the maximum value of the potential difference across the x-ray
tube during an exposure.
(198)
"Periodic quality assurance check" means a procedure which is performed to
ensure that a previous calibration continues to be valid.
(199) "Permanent radiographic installation"
means an installation or structure designed or intended for radiography and in
which radiography is regularly performed.
(200) "Person" is defined by
KRS
216B.015(16).
(201) "Personal supervision" means guidance
and instruction by the supervisor who is physically present at the job site and
watching the performance of the operation in proximity so that contact can be
maintained and immediate assistance given as required.
(202) "Personnel monitoring equipment" means
a device designed to be worn or carried by an individual for the purpose of
estimating the dose received by the individual.
(203) "Phantom" means a volume of material
behaving in a manner similar to tissue with respect to the attenuation and
scattering of radiation.
(204)
"Phototimer" means a method for controlling radiation exposures to image
receptors by the amount of radiation which reaches a radiation monitoring
device. The radiation monitoring device is part of an electronic circuit which
controls the duration of time the tube is activated. See "automatic exposure
control".
(205) "Physical
description" means the items called for on NRC Form 541 to describe low-level
radioactive waste.
(206)
"Physician" is defined by
KRS
311.720(9).
(207) "Planned special exposure" means an
infrequent exposure to radiation, separate from and in addition to the annual
dose limits.
(208) "Position
indicating device" means a device on dental x-ray equipment used to indicate
the beam position and to establish a definite source-surface (skin) distance.
It may or may not incorporate or serve as a beam-limiting device.
(209) "Positive pressure respirator" means a
respirator in which the pressure inside the respirator inlet covering exceeds
the ambient air pressure outside the respirator.
(210) "Powered air-purifying respirator" or
"PAPR" means an air-purifying respirator that uses a blower to force the
ambient air through air-purifying elements to the inlet covering.
(211) "Preceptor" means an individual who
provides, directs, or verifies the training and experience required for an
individual to become an authorized user, an authorized medical physicist, an
authorized nuclear pharmacist, or a Radiation Safety Officer.
(212) "Pressure demand respirator" means a
positive pressure atmosphere-supplying respirator that admits breathing air to
the facepiece when the positive pressure is reduced inside the facepiece by
inhalation.
(213) "Preregistrant"
means a person who is preregistered with the cabinet for the intent of
obtaining a radiation producing machine registerable under
902 KAR
100:110.
(214) "Preregistration" means preregistration
with the cabinet as specified in
902 KAR
100:110.
(215) "Prescribed dosage" means the quantity
of radiopharmaceutical activity as documented:
(a) In a written directive;
(b) In the diagnostic clinical procedures
manual; or
(c) In an appropriate
record in accordance with the directions of the authorized user for diagnostic
procedures.
(216)
"Prescribed dose" means:
(a) For gamma
stereotactic radiosurgery, the total dose as documented in the written
directive;
(b) For teletherapy, the
total dose and dose per fraction as documented in the written
directive;
(c) For manual
brachytherapy, the total source strength and exposure time or the total dose,
as documented in the written directive; or
(d) For remote brachytherapy afterloaders,
the total dose and dose per fraction as documented in the written
directive.
(217)
"Primary dose monitoring system" means a system that:
(a) Monitors the useful beam during
irradiation; and
(b) Terminates
irradiation if a preselected number of dose monitor units have been
acquired.
(218)
"Principal activities" means activities authorized by the license that are
essential to achieving the purpose for which the license was issued or amended.
"Principal activities" do not include:
(a)
Storage during which licensed material is not accessed for use or disposal;
and
(b) Activities incidental to
decontamination or decommissioning.
(219) "Protective apron" means an apron made
of radiation absorbing materials of at least 0.25 mm lead equivalency; that is,
if the HVL of the apron is not less than 0.25 mm lead at normal operating
voltages.
(220) "Protective
barrier" means a barrier of radiation absorbing material used to reduce
radiation exposure.
(a) "Primary protective
barrier" means a barrier sufficient to attenuate the useful beam to the
required degree.
(b) "Secondary
protective barrier" means a barrier sufficient to attenuate the stray radiation
to the required degree.
(221) "Protective glove" means a glove made
of radiation absorbing materials of at least 0.25 mm lead equivalency; that is,
if the HVL of the glove is not less than 0.25 mm lead at normal operating
voltages.
(222) "Public dose" means
the dose received by a member of the public from sources of radiation from
licensed or registered operations. It shall not include radiation received:
(a) As an occupational dose;
(b) From background radiation;
(c) As a medical patient;
(d) From voluntary participation in a medical
research program; or
(e) From
exposure to an individual administered radioactive material and released in
accordance with
902 KAR
100:072, Section 27.
(223) "Qualified expert" means an individual
who has been recognized by the cabinet to possess the knowledge and training
to:
(a) Measure ionizing radiation;
(b) Evaluate safety techniques; and
(c) Advise regarding radiation protection
needs.
(224)
"Qualitative fit test or "QFT" means a pass or fail fit test to assess the
adequacy of respirator fit that relies on the individual's response to the test
agent.
(225) "Quality factor" or
"Q" means the modifying factor used to derive dose equivalent from absorbed
dose.
(a) Quality factors and absorbed dose
equivalencies:
Type of Radiation
|
Quality Factor (Q)
|
Absorbed Dose Equal to a Unit Dose Equivalent
|
X-, gamma, or beta radiation
|
1
|
1
|
Alpha particles, multiple-charged particles, fission
fragments, and heavy particles of unknown charge
|
20
|
0.05
|
Neutrons of unknown energy
|
10
|
0.1
|
High-energy protons
|
10
|
0.1
|
aAbsorbed dose in rad equal to one
(1) rem or the absorbed dose in gray equal to one (1) sievert.
(b) If it is more convenient to measure the
neutron fluence rate than to determine the neutron dose equivalent rate in rems
per hour or sieverts per hour, as provided in paragraph (a) of this subsection,
one (1) rem (0.01 sievert) of neutron radiation of unknown energies may, for
purposes of the regulations in this part, be assumed to result from a total
fluence of twenty-five (25) million neutrons per square centimeter incident
upon the body. If sufficient information exists to estimate the approximate
energy distribution of the neutrons, the licensee may use the fluence rate per
unit dose equivalent or the appropriate Q value from paragraph (c) of this
subsection to convert a measured tissue dose in rads to dose equivalent in
rems.
(c) Mean quality factors, Q,
and fluency per unit dose equivalent for monoenergetic neutrons:
Neutron Energy (MeV)
|
Quality Factora (Q)
|
Fluency per Unit
Dose Equivalentb (neutrons
cm-2 rem-1)
|
(thermal)
|
2.5 x 10-8
|
2
|
980 x 106
|
1 x 10-7
|
2
|
980 x 106
|
1 x 10-6
|
2
|
810 x 106
|
1 x 10-5
|
2
|
810 x 106
|
1 x 10-4
|
2
|
840 x 106
|
1 x 10-3
|
2
|
980 x 106
|
1 x 10-2
|
2.5
|
1010 x 106
|
1 x 10-1
|
7.5
|
170 x 106
|
5 x 10-1
|
11
|
39 x 106
|
1
|
11
|
27 x 106
|
2.5
|
9
|
29 x 106
|
5
|
8
|
23 x 106
|
7
|
7
|
24 x 106
|
10
|
6.5
|
24 x 106
|
14
|
7.5
|
17 x 106
|
20
|
8
|
16 x 106
|
40
|
7
|
14 x 106
|
60
|
5.5
|
16 x 106
|
1 x 102
|
4
|
20 x 106
|
2 x 102
|
3.5
|
19 x 106
|
3 x 102
|
3.5
|
16 x 106
|
4 x 102
|
3.5
|
14 x 106
|
a Value of quality factor (Q) at the
point at which the dose equivalent is maximum in a thirty (30)-cm diameter
cylinder tissue-equivalent phantom.
b Monoenergetic neutrons incident
normally on a thirty (30)-cm diameter cylinder tissue-equivalent
phantom.
(226)
"Quantitative fit test "QNFT" means an assessment of the adequacy of respirator
fit by numerically measuring the amount of leakage into the
respirator.
(227) "Quarter" is
defined by
KRS
341.080(1)(b).
(228) "Rad" means the special unit of
absorbed dose. One (1) rad equals an absorbed dose of 0.01 joule per kilogram
(0.01 gray) or 100 ergs per gram.
(229) "Radiation" means ionizing radiation.
(a) It includes the following:
1. Gamma rays;
2. X-rays;
3. Alpha particles;
4. Beta particles;
5. High speed electrons;
6. Neutrons;
7. High-speed protons; and
8. Other atomic particles capable of
producing ions.
(b) It
excludes nonionizing radiations, such as:
1.
Sound;
2. Microwaves;
3. Radiowaves; or
4. Visible, infrared, or ultraviolet
light.
(c) The following
are specific forms of radiation:
1. "Leakage
radiation" means radiation coming from within the tube or source housing except
the useful beam.
2. "Scattered
radiation" means radiation that, during passage through matter, has been
deviated in direction, and may have been modified by a decrease in
energy.
3. "Useful radiation" or
"primary beam" means radiation that passes through the window, aperture, cone,
or other beam limiting device of the tube or source housing.
4. "Stray radiation" means the sum of leakage
and scattered radiation.
(230) "Radiation area" means an area,
accessible to individuals, in which there exists radiation at levels that an
individual may receive in excess of five (5) millirems (0.05 mSv) in one (1)
hour at thirty (30) centimeters from the radiation source or from a surface
that the radiation penetrates.
(231) "Radiation detector" means a device
which, in the presence of radiation, by either direct or indirect means,
provides a signal or other indication suitable for use in measuring one (1) or
more quantities of incident radiation.
(232) "Radiation head" means the structure
from which the useful beam emerges.
(233) "Radiation machine" means a device
capable of producing radiation, except a device that produces radiation only
from radioactive material.
(234)
"Radiation safety officer" means an individual who:
(a) Meets the requirements in
902 KAR
100:072, Sections 63 and 64(1) or (3)(a); or
(b) Is identified as a radiation safety
officer on:
1. A specific medical use licensee
issued by the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or an agreement
state; or
2. A medical use permit
issued by a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission master material
licensee.
(235) "Radiation therapy simulation system"
means a fluoroscopic or radiographic x-ray system intended for:
(a) Localizing the volume to be exposed
during radiation therapy; and
(b)
Confirming the position and size of the therapeutic irradiation
field.
(236)
"Radioactive marker" means radioactive material placed subsurface or on a
structure intended for subsurface use for the purpose of depth determination or
direction orientation.
(237)
"Radioactive material" means a solid, liquid, or gas, which emits radiation
spontaneously.
(238)
"Radioactivity" means the disintegration of unstable atomic nuclei by the
emission of radiation.
(239)
"Radiograph" means an image receptor on which the image is created directly or
indirectly by an x-ray pattern and results in a permanent record.
(240) "Radiographer" means an individual who
performs or who, in attendance at the site where sources of radiation are being
used, personally supervises industrial radiographic operations and who is
responsible to the licensee or registrant for assuring compliance with the
requirements of administrative regulations and license conditions.
(241) "Radiographer's assistant" means an
individual who, under the personal supervision of a radiographer, uses sources
of radiation, related handling tools, or survey instruments in industrial
radiography.
(242) "Radiographer
instructor" means a radiographer who has been authorized by the cabinet to
provide on-the-job training to radiographer trainees under
902
KAR 100:100, Section 14.
(243) "Radiographer trainee" means an
individual who, under the personal supervision of a radiographer instructor,
uses sources of radiation, related handling tools, or radiation survey
instruments during the course of instruction.
(244) "Radiographic exposure device" means an
instrument containing a sealed source fastened or contained within, in which
the sealed source or its shielding may be moved, or otherwise changed, from a
shielded to an unshielded position for purposes of making a radiographic
exposure.
(245) "Radiographic
imaging system" means a system designed to record a permanent or semipermanent
image on an image receptor by the action of ionizing radiation.
(246) "Radiographic personnel" means a:
(a) Radiographer;
(b) Radiographer instructor; or
(c) Radiographer trainee.
(247) "Rating" means the operating
limits specified by the component manufacturer.
(248) "Recordable event" means the
administration of:
(a) A radiopharmaceutical
or radiation without a written directive, if a written directive is
required;
(b) A radiopharmaceutical
or radiation if a written directive is required without daily recording of each
administered radiopharmaceutical dosage or radiation dose in the appropriate
record;
(c) A radiopharmaceutical
dosage greater than thirty (30) microcuries of sodium iodide I-125 or I-131 if:
1. The administered dosage differs from the
prescribed dosage by more than twenty (20) percent; and
2. The difference between the administered
dosage and prescribed dosage exceeds fifteen (15) microcuries;
(d) A therapeutic
radiopharmaceutical dosage, other than sodium iodide I-125 or I-131, if the
administered dosage differs from the prescribed dosage by more than twenty (20)
percent;
(e) A teletherapy
radiation dose, if the calculated weekly administered dose is fifteen (15)
percent greater than the weekly prescribed dose; or
(f) A brachytherapy radiation dose, if the
calculated administered dose differs from the prescribed dose by more than
twenty (20) percent.
(249) "Recording" means producing a permanent
form of an image resulting from x-ray photons.
(250) "Reference man" means a hypothetical
aggregation of human physical and physiological characteristics arrived at by
international consensus. These characteristics may be used by researchers and
public health workers to standardize results of experiments and to relate
biological insult to a common base.
(251) "Registrant" means a person who is
registered with the cabinet and is legally obligated to register with the
cabinet under
902 KAR
100:110.
(252) "Registration" means registration with
the cabinet under
902 KAR
100:110.
(253) "Regulations of the U.S. Department of
Transportation" means the regulations in 49 C.F.R. Parts 100-189.
(254) "Rem" means a special unit of
quantities expressed as dose equivalent. The dose equivalent in rems is equal
to the absorbed dose in rads multiplied by the quality factor (one (1) rem =
0.01 sievert).
(255) "Research and
development" means:
(a) Theoretical analysis,
exploration, or experimentation; or
(b) The extension of investigative findings
and theories of a scientific or technical nature into practical application for
experimental and demonstration purposes, including the experimental production
and testing of models, devices, equipment, materials, and processes. Research
and development does not include the internal or external administration of
radiation or radioactive material to human beings.
(256) "Residential location" means an area
where structures for human habitation are located.
(257) "Residual radioactivity" means
low-level radioactive waste resulting from processing or decontamination
activities that cannot be easily separated into distinct batches attributable
to specific waste generators. This waste is attributable to the processor or
decontamination facility, as applicable.
(258) "Respiratory protective device" means
an apparatus used to reduce an individual's intake of airborne radioactive
materials.
(259) "Restricted area"
means an area access to which is limited by the licensee or registrant for
purposes of protection of individuals against undue risks from exposure to
radiation and radioactive materials. A restricted area shall not include areas
used as residential quarters, although a separate room or rooms in a
residential building may be set apart as a restricted area.
(260) "Roentgen" or "R" means the special
unit of exposure. One (1) roentgen (R) equals 2.58 x
10-4 coulombs per kilogram of air. See
"Exposure".
(261) "Sanitary
sewerage" means a system of public sewers for carrying off waste, water, and
refuse, but excludes sewage treatment facilities, septic tanks, and leach
fields owned or operated by the licensee.
(262) "Sealed source" means radioactive
material that is encased in a capsule designed to prevent leakage or escape of
the radioactive material.
(263)
"Secondary dose monitoring system" means a system which terminates irradiation
upon failure of the primary system.
(264) "Self-contained breathing apparatus" or
"SCBA" means an atmosphere-supplying respirator for which the breathing air
source is designed to be carried by the user.
(265) "Shallow-dose equivalent (Hs)", with
respect to external exposure of the skin of the whole body or the skin of an
extremity, means the dose equivalent at a tissue depth of 0.007 centimeter
(seven (7) mg/cm2).
(266) "Shielded position" means the location
within the radiographic exposure device or storage container which, by
manufacturer's design, is the proper location for storage of the sealed
source.
(267) "Shielded-room
radiography" means industrial radiography conducted in a room shielded so that
radiation levels at every location on the exterior meet the limitations
specified in
902 KAR
100:019, Section 10.
(268) "Shipper" means the licensed entity,
the generator that offers low-level radioactive waste for transportation, and
may consign the waste to a licensed waste collector, waste processor, or land
disposal facility operator.
(269)
"Shipping paper" means NRC Form 540, and if required, 540A, or their
equivalent, and includes the information required by the U.S. Department of
Transportation in 49 C.F.R. Part 172 .
(270) "Shutter" means a device attached to
the tube housing assembly which can totally intercept the useful beam and which
has a lead equivalency not less than that of the tube housing
assembly.
(271) "Sievert" means:
(a) The International System (SI) unit of
quantities expressed as dose equivalent. The dose equivalent in sieverts is
equal to the absorbed dose in grays multiplied by the quality factor (1 Sv=100
rems).
(b) See the table in the
definition of "quality factors" for the quality factors to convert absorbed
dose to dose equivalent.
(272) "Site area emergency" means the
existence of situation where an event may occur, is in progress, or has
occurred that may:
(a) Lead to a significant
release of radioactive material; and
(b) Require a response by an off-site
response organization to protect persons off site.
(273) "Site boundary" means that line beyond
which the land or property is not owned, leased, or otherwise controlled by the
licensee.
(274) "Source" means the
focal spot of the x-ray tube.
(275)
"Source changer" means a device designed and used for replacement of sealed
sources in radiographic exposure devices, including those source changers also
used for transporting and storage of sealed sources.
(276) "Source holder" means a housing or
assembly into which a radioactive source is placed for the purpose of
facilitating the handling and use of the source.
(277) "Source image receptor distance" or
"SID" means the distance from the source to the center of the input surface of
the image receptor.
(278) "Source
material" means:
(a) Uranium or thorium, or a
combination thereof, in a physical or chemical form; or
(b) Ores that contain by weight 0.05 percent
or more of:
1. Uranium;
2. Thorium; or
3. A combination of uranium and
thorium.
(c) Source
material does not include special nuclear material.
(279) "Source of radiation" means a
radioactive material or device, or equipment emitting or capable of producing
radiation.
(280) "Special form
radioactive material" means radioactive material that satisfies the following
conditions:
(a) It is a single solid piece or
is contained in a sealed capsule that can be opened only by destroying the
capsule;
(b) The piece or capsule
has at least one (1) dimension not less than five (5) millimeters (0.197 inch);
and
(c)
1. It satisfies the test requirements
specified by the NRC in 10 C.F.R. Part 71.75 .
2. A special form encapsulation designed
under the NRC requirements in
10
C.F.R. 71.4 in effect on June 30, 1983, and
constructed prior to July 1, 1985, may continue to be used.
3. A special form encapsulation designed in
accordance with the NRC requirements in
10
C.F.R. 71.4 in effect on March 31, 1996, and
constructed before April 1, 1998 may continue to be used.
4. Any other special form encapsulation shall
meet the specifications of this definition.
(281) "Special nuclear material" means:
(a) Plutonium, uranium 233, uranium enriched
in the isotope U-233 or in the isotope U-235, and other material which the
Governor declares by order to be special nuclear material after the United
States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or successor thereto, has determined the
material to be special nuclear material, but does not include source material;
or
(b) Material artificially
enriched by one (1) of the foregoing, but does not include source
material.
(282) "Special
nuclear material in quantities not sufficient to form a critical mass" means:
(a) Uranium enriched in the isotope U-235 in
quantities not exceeding 350 grams of contained U-235;
(b) U-233 in quantities not exceeding 200
grams;
(c) Plutonium in quantities
not exceeding 200 grams; or
(d) A
combination of them as specified by the following formula:
1. For each kind of special nuclear material,
determine the ratio between the quantity of that special nuclear material and
the quantity specified above for the same kind of special nuclear
material.
2. The sum of these
ratios for the different kinds of special nuclear material in combination shall
not exceed one (1).
3. For example,
the following quantities in combination would not exceed the limitation and are
within the formula:
Click here
to view image
(283) "Special purpose x-ray system" means a
radiographic x-ray system which, by design, is limited to radiographic
examination of a specific anatomical region.
(284) "Specific activity" means the
radioactivity of the radionuclide per unit mass of that nuclide. The specific
activity of a material in which the radionuclide is essentially uniformly
distributed is the radioactivity per unit mass of the material.
(285) "Spot check" means a procedure
performed to assure that a previous calibration continues to be
valid.
(286) "Spot film" means a
radiograph which is made during a fluoroscopic examination to permanently
record conditions which exist during that fluoroscopic procedure.
(287) "Spot-film device" means a device
intended to transport or position a radiographic image receptor between the
x-ray source and fluoroscopic image receptor. It includes a device intended to
hold a cassette over the input end of an image intensifier for the purpose of
making a radiograph.
(288) "SSD"
means the distance between the source and the skin of the patient.
(289) "Stationary beam radiation therapy"
means radiation therapy without displacement of one (1) or more mechanical axes
relative to the patient during irradiation.
(290) "Stochastic effect" means a health
effect that occurs randomly and for which the probability of the effect
occurring, rather than its severity, is assumed to be a linear function of dose
plus threshold factors.
(291)
"Storage" or "waste storage" means the holding of waste for treatment or
disposal for a period of twenty-four (24) hours or more.
(292) "Storage area" means:
(a) A location, facility, or vehicle used to
store, transport, or secure a radiographic exposure device, storage container,
or sealed source if the source is not in use; and
(b) Which is locked or has a physical barrier
to prevent accidental exposure, tampering with, or unauthorized removal of the
device, container, or source.
(293) "Storage container" means a device in
which a sealed source is transported or stored.
(294) "Stray radiation" means the sum of
leakage and scattered radiation.
(295) "Subsurface tracer study" means the
release of a substance tagged with radioactive material for the purpose of
tracing the movement or position of the tagged substance in the well-bore or
adjacent formation.
(296)
"Supplied-air respirator "SAR" "airline respirator" means an
atmosphere-supplying respirator for which the source of breathing air is not
designated to be carried by the user.
(297) "Surface contaminated object" or "SCO"
means a solid object that is not classed as radioactive material, but which has
radioactive material distributed on a surface. SCO must be in one (1) of two
(2) groups with surface activity not exceeding the following limits:
(a) SCO-I: A solid object on which:
1. The nonfixed contamination on the
accessible surface averaged over 300 cm2 (or the
area of the surface if less than 300 cm2) does not
exceed 10-4
microcurie/cm2 (4 Bq/cm2)
for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha emitters, or
10-5 microcurie/cm2 (0.4
Bq/cm2) for all other alpha emitters;
2. The fixed contamination on the accessible
surface averaged over 300 cm2 (or the area of the
surface if less than 300 cm2) does not exceed 1.0
microcurie/cm2 (4x104
Bq/cm2) for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha
emitters, or 0.1 microcurie/cm2
(4x103 Bq/cm2) for all
other alpha emitters; and
3. The
nonfixed contamination plus the fixed contamination on the inaccessible surface
averaged over 300 cm2 (or the area of the surface if
less than 300 cm2) does not exceed 1
microcurie/cm2 (4x104
Bq/cm2) for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha
emitters, for 0.1 microcurie/cm2
(4x103 Bq/cm2) for all
other alpha emitters.
(b) SCO-II: A solid object on which the
limits for SCO-I are exceeded and on which:
1.
The nonfixed contamination on the accessible surface averaged over
300cm2 (or the area of the surface if less than 300
cm2) does not exceed 10-2
microcurie/cm2 (400
Bq/cm2) for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha
emitters or 10-3
microcurie/cm2 (40
Bq/cm2) for all other alpha emitters;
2. The fixed contamination on the accessible
surface averaged over 300 cm2 (or the area of the
surface if less than 300 cm2) does not exceed 20
microcuries/cm2 (8x105
Bq/cm2) for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha
emitters, or 2 microcuries/cm2
(8x104 Bq/cm2) for all
other alpha emitters; and
3. The
nonfixed contamination plus the fixed contamination on the inaccessible surface
averaged over 300 cm2 (or the area of the surface if
less than 300 cm2) does not exceed 20
microcuries/cm2 (8x105
Bq/cm2) for beta and gamma and low toxicity alpha
emitters, or 2 microcuries/cm2
(8x104 Bq/cm2) for all
other alpha emitters.
(298) "Survey" means an evaluation of the
radiological conditions and potential hazards incident to the production, use,
transfer, release, disposal, or presence of sources of radiation. If
appropriate, the evaluation shall include at least:
(a) A physical survey of the location of
sources of radiation; and
(b)
Measurements or calculations of levels of radiation or concentrations or
quantities of radioactive material present.
(299) "Target" means that part of an x-ray
tube or accelerator onto which a beam of accelerated particles is directed to
produce ionizing radiation or other particles.
(300) "Technique factors" means the
conditions of operation. They are specified as follows:
(a) For capacitor energy storage equipment,
peak tube potential in kV and quantity of charge in mAs;
(b) For field emission equipment rated for
pulsed operation, peak tube potential in kV and number of x-ray
pulses;
(c) For CT x-ray systems
designed for pulsed operation, peak tube potential in kV, scan time in seconds,
and either tube current in mA, x-ray pulse width in seconds, and the number of
x-ray pulses per scan, or the product of tube current, x-ray pulse width, and
the number of x-ray pulses in mAs;
(d) For CT x-ray systems not designed for
pulsed operation, peak tube potential in kV, and either tube current in mA and
scan time in seconds, or the product of tube current and exposure time in mAs
and the scan time if the scan time and exposure time are equivalent;
and
(e) For other equipment, peak
tube potential in kV and tube current in mA and exposure time in seconds or the
product of tube current and exposure time in mAs.
(301) "Technically Enhanced Naturally
Occurring Radioactive Material "TENORM" means N.O.R.M., which has been
separated to various degrees from the original ore or other material, refining
or implementing it.
(302)
"Teletherapy" means therapeutic irradiation in which the source of radiation is
at a distance from the body.
(303)
"Teletherapy physicist" means the individual identified as the teletherapy
physicist on a cabinet license.
(304) "Temporary job site" means a location
to which radioactive material has been dispatched to perform a job, operation,
or study other than the location listed in a specific license or certificate of
registration.
(305) "Tenth-value
layer (TVL)" means the thickness of a specified material that attenuates
X-radiation or gamma radiation to an extent that the air kerma rate, exposure
rate, or absorbed dose rate is reduced to one-tenth of the value measured
without the material at the same point.
(306) "Termination of irradiation" means the
stopping of irradiation in a fashion that does not permit continuance of
irradiation without the resetting of operating conditions at the control
panel.
(307) "Tests" means the
process of verifying compliance with an applicable regulation.
(308) "Therapeutic radiation machines" means
x-ray or electron-producing equipment designed and used for external beam
radiation therapy.
(309)
"Therapeutic-type protective tube housing" means:
(a) For x-ray therapy equipment not capable
of operating at 500 kVp or above: an x-ray tube housing so constructed that the
leakage radiation at a distance of one (1) meter from the target does not
exceed one (1) roentgen in one (1) hour if the tube is operated at its maximum
rated tube potential. Small areas of reduced protection are acceptable
providing the average reading over a 100-square centimeter area at one (1)
meter distance from the target does not exceed the value established in this
paragraph; or
(b) For x-ray therapy
equipment capable of operating at 500 kVp or above: an x-ray tube housing so
constructed that the leakage radiation at a distance of one (1) meter from the
target does not exceed one-tenth (0.1) percent of the useful beam exposure rate
at one (1) meter from the target, for its operating conditions. Small areas of
reduced protection are acceptable providing the average reading over a
100-square centimeter area at one (1) meter distance from the target does not
exceed the value established in this paragraph.
(310) "Tight-fitting facepiece" means a
respiratory inlet covering that forms a complete seal with the face.
(311) "Tomogram" means the depiction of the
x-ray attenuation properties of a section through the body.
(312) "Total effective dose equivalent" or
"TEDE" means the sum of the deep-dose equivalent (for external exposures) and
the committed effective dose equivalent (for internal exposures).
(313) "Traceable to a national standard"
means that a quantity or a measurement has been compared to a national standard
directly or indirectly through one (1) or more intermediate steps and that
comparisons have been documented.
(314) "Transport container" means a package
that is designed to provide radiation safety and security if sealed sources are
transported and which meets the requirements of the 49 C.F.R. 173, Subpart
I.
(315) "Transport index" means:
(a) The dimensionless number that designates
the degree of control to be exercised by the carrier during transportation,
rounded up to the next tenth required to be placed on the label of a
package.
(b) The transport index is
determined by multiplying the maximum radiation level in millisievert (mSv) per
hour at one (1) meter (3.3 feet) from the external surface of the package by
100 (equivalent to the maximum radiation level in millirem per hour at one (1)
meter (3.3 feet).
(316)
"Treatment" or "waste treatment" means a method, technique, or process,
including storage for radioactive decay, designed to change the physical,
chemical, or biological characteristics or composition of a waste in order to
render the waste for transport, storage or disposal, amendable to recovery,
convertible to another usable material, or reduced in volume.
(317) "Treatment site" means the anatomical
description of the tissue intended to receive a radiation dose, as described in
a written directive.
(318) "Tritium
neutron generator target source" means a tritium source used within a neutron
generator tube to produce neutrons.
(319) "Tube" means an x-ray tube, unless
otherwise specified.
(320) "Tube
housing assembly" means the tube housing with tube installed. It includes
high-voltage or filament transformers and other appropriate elements if they
are contained within the tube housing.
(321) "Tube rating chart" means the set of
curves which specify the rated limits of operation of the tube in terms of the
technique factors.
(322) "Type A
quantity" means a quantity of radioactive material, the aggregate radioactivity
of which does not exceed A1 for special form radioactive material or A2 for
normal form radioactive material, where A1 and A2 are given in 10 C.F.R. 71
Appendix A, or may be determined by procedures described in 10 C.F.R. 71
Appendix A.
(323) "Type B
packaging" means a packaging designed to retain the integrity of containment
and shielding required by U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulations if
subjected to the normal conditions of transport and hypothetical accident test
conditions established in 10 C.F.R. Part 71 .
(324) "Type B quantity" means a quantity of
radioactive material greater than a Type A quantity.
(325) "Uniform low-level radioactive waste
manifest" or "uniform manifest" means the combination of NRC Forms 540, 541,
and if necessary, 542, or their equivalents, and their respective continuation
sheets as needed, or equivalent.
(326) "Unirradiated uranium" means uranium
containing not more than 2x103 Bq of plutonium per
gram of uranium-235, not more than 9 x 106 Bq of
fission products per gram of uranium-235, and not more than 5 x
10-3 gram of uranium-236 per gram of
uranium-235.
(327) "U.S. Department
of Energy" means the Department of Energy established by
42
U.S.C. 7101 et seq., to the extent that the
department exercises functions formerly vested in the U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission, its chairman, members, officers and components and transferred to
the U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration and to the
Administrator thereof and retransferred to the Secretary of Energy in
42 U.S.C. 7151,
effective October 1, 1977.
(328)
"Unrefined and unprocessed ore" means ore in its natural form prior to
processing, such as grinding, roasting, beneficiating, or refining.
(329) "Unrestricted area" means an area
access to which is not controlled or limited by the licensee or registrant for
purposes of protection of individuals from exposure to radiation and
radioactive material.
(330)
"Uranium - natural, depleted, enriched" means:
(a) "Natural uranium" means uranium with the
naturally occurring distribution of uranium isotopes (approximately 0.711
weight percent uranium-235, and the remainder by weight essentially
uranium-238);
(b) "Depleted
uranium" means uranium containing less uranium-235 than the naturally occurring
distribution of uranium isotopes;
(c) "Enriched uranium" means uranium
containing more uranium-235 than the naturally occurring distribution of
uranium isotopes.
(331)
"Uranium fuel cycle" means the operations of milling of uranium ore, chemical
conversion of uranium, isotopic enrichment of uranium, fabrication of uranium
fuel, generation of electricity by a light-water-cooled nuclear power plant
using uranium fuel, and reprocessing of spent uranium fuel to the extent that
these activities directly support the production of electrical power for public
use. Uranium fuel cycle shall not include mining operations, operations at
waste disposal sites, transportation of radioactive material in support of
these operations, and the reuse of recovered nonuranium special nuclear and
byproduct materials from the cycle.
(332) "Useful beam" means the radiation that
passes through the tube housing port and the aperture of the beam limiting
device if the exposure switch or timer is activated.
(333) "User" means an individual who
personally utilizes or manipulates a source of radiation.
(334) "User seal check" or "fit check" means
an action conducted by the respirator user to determine if the respirator is
properly seated to the face. Examples include negative pressure check, positive
pressure check, irritant smoke check, or isoamylacetate check.
(335) "Variable-aperture beam limiting
device" means a beam limiting device that has capacity for stepless adjustment
of the x-ray field size at a given SID.
(336) "Vendor" means a person who sells
radiation producing machines or accelerators registerable with the cabinet as
specified by
902 KAR
100:110.
(337) "Vendor registrant" means a vendor who
is registered with the cabinet.
(338) "Vendor registration" means
registration of a vendor with the cabinet described by
902 KAR
100:110.
(339) "Very high radiation area" means an
area, accessible to individuals, in which radiation levels from radiation
sources external to the body may result in an individual receiving an absorbed
dose in excess of 500 rads (five (5) grays) in one (1) hour at one (1) meter
from a radiation source or one (1) meter from a surface that the radiation
penetrates.
(340) "Virtual source"
means a point from which radiation appears to originate.
(341) "Visible area" means that portion of
the input surface of the image receptor over which incident x-ray photons are
producing a visible image.
(342)
"Visiting authorized nuclear pharmacist" means a nuclear pharmacist who is not
identified on the license of the licensee being visited.
(343) "Visiting authorized user" means an
authorized user who is not identified on the license of the licensee being
visited.
(344) "Waste". See
"low-level radioactive waste".
(345) "Waste collector" means an entity,
operating under the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or agreement
state license whose principal purpose is to collect and consolidate low level
waste generated by others and to transfer this waste, without processing or
repackaging the collected waste, to another licensed waste collector, licensed
waste processor, or licensed land disposal facility.
(346) "Waste description" means the physical,
chemical, and radiological description of a low-level radioactive waste as
called for on NRC Form 541.
(347)
"Waste generator" means an entity, operating under the cabinet, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, or agreement state license, who:
(a) Possesses any material or component that
contains radioactivity or is radioactively contaminated for which the licensee
foresees no further use; and
(b)
Transfers this material or component to a licensed land disposal facility or to
a licensed waste collector or processor for handling or treatment prior to
disposal. A licensee performing processing or decontamination services may be
waste generator if the transfer of low-level radioactive waste from its
facility is defined as "residual waste".
(348) "Waste processor" means an entity,
operating under a cabinet, U.S. Regulatory Commission or agreement state
license, whose principal purpose is to process, repackage, or treat low-level
radioactive material or waste generated by others prior to eventual transfer of
waste to a licensed low-level radioactive waste land disposal
facility.
(349) "Waste type" means
a waste within a disposal container having a unique physical description, such
as a specific waste descriptor code or description, or a waste sorbed on or
solidified in a specifically defined media.
(350) "Wedge filter" means an added filter
effecting continuous progressive attenuation on the useful beam or a part
thereof.
(351) "Week" means seven
(7) consecutive days starting on Sunday.
(352) "Weighting factor (Wt)", for an organ
or tissue (T) means the proportion of the risk of stochastic effects resulting
from irradiation of that organ or tissue to the total risk of stochastic
effects if the whole body is irradiated uniformly. For calculating the
effective dose equivalent, the values of (Wt) are:
Organ Dose Weighting
|
Factors
|
Organ or tissue
|
Wt
|
Gonads
|
0.25
|
Breast
|
0.15
|
Red bone marrow
|
0.12
|
Lung
|
0.12
|
Thyroid
|
0.03
|
Bone surfaces |
0.03 |
Remainder |
10.30 |
Whole Body
|
21.00
|
10.30 results from 0.06 for each of
five (5) "remainder" organs (excluding the skin and the lens of the eye) that
receive the highest doses.
2For the purpose of weighting the
external whole body dose (for adding it to the internal dose), a single
weighting factor, Wt=1.0, has been specified. The use of other weighting
factors for external exposure will be approved on a case-by-case basis,
pursuant to 10 C.F.R. Part 20 , until a time as specific guidance is
issued.
(353) "Well-bore"
means a drilled hole in which wire line service operations and subsurface
tracer studies are performed.
(354)
"Well-logging" means the lowering and raising of measuring devices or tools
which may contain sources of radiation in well-bores or cavities for the
purpose of obtaining information about the well or adjacent
formations.
(355) "Whole body"
means, for purposes of external exposure, head, trunk (including male gonads),
arms above the elbow, or legs above the knee.
(356) "Wire line" means a cable containing
one (1) or more electrical conductors which is used to lower and raise logging
tools in the well-bore.
(357) "Wire
line service operation" means an evaluation or mechanical service which is
performed in the well-bore using devices on a wire line.
(358) "Worker" means an individual engaged in
activities licensed or registered by the cabinet and controlled by a licensee
or registrant, but does not include the licensee or registrant.
(359) "Working level" or "WL" means a
combination of short-lived radon daughters (for radon-222: polonium-218,
lead-214, bismuth-214, and polonium-214; and for radon-220: polonium-216,
lead-212, bismuth-212, and polonium-212) in one (1) liter of air that results
in the ultimate emission of 1.3x105MeV of potential
alpha particle energy.
(360)
"Working level month" or "WLM" means an exposure to one (1) working level for
170 hours (2,000 working hours per year/twelve (12) months per year =
approximately 170 hours per month).
(361) "Written directive" means an order in
writing for a specific patient or human research subject, dated and signed by
an authorized user prior to the administration of a radiopharmaceutical or
radiation, except as specified in paragraph (f) of this subsection, and
containing the following information:
(a) For
an administration of quantities greater than thirty (30) microcuries of sodium
iodide I-125 or I-131: the dosage;
(b) For a therapeutic administration of a
radiopharmaceutical other than sodium iodide I-125 or I-131: the
radiopharmaceutical, dosage, and route of administration;
(c) For gamma stereotactic radiosurgery:
target coordinates, collimator size, plug pattern, and total dose;
(d) For teletherapy: the total dose, dose per
fraction, treatment site, and overall treatment period;
(e) For high-dose-rate remote afterloading
brachytherapy: the radioisotope, treatment site, and total dose; or
(f) For all other brachytherapy:
1. Prior to implementation: the radioisotope,
number of sources, and source strengths; and
2. After implantation, but prior to
completion of the procedure: the radioisotope, treatment site, and total source
strength and exposure time (or, equivalently, the total dose).
(362) "X-ray control"
means a device which controls input power to the x-ray high-voltage generator
or the x-ray tube. It includes timers, phototimers, automatic brightness
stabilizers, and similar devices which control the technique factors of an
x-ray exposure.
(363) "X-ray
equipment" means an x-ray system, subsystem, or component thereof. X-ray
equipment is further classified as:
(a)
"Mobile" means x-ray equipment mounted on a permanent base with wheels or
casters for moving while completely assembled.
(b) "Portable" means x-ray equipment designed
to be hand-carried.
(c)
"Stationary" means x-ray equipment which is installed in a fixed
location.
(d) "Transportable" means
x-ray equipment installed in a vehicle or trailer.
(364) "X-ray field" means that area of the
intersection of the useful beam and one (1) of the set of planes parallel to
and including the plane of the image receptor, whose perimeter is the locus of
points at which the exposure rate is one-fourth (1/4) of the maximum in the
intersection.
(365) "X-ray
high-voltage generator" means a device that transforms electrical energy from
the potential supplied by the x-ray control to the tube operating potential.
The device may also include means for transforming alternating current to
direct current, filament transformers for the x-ray tube, high-voltage
switches, electrical protective devices, and other appropriate
elements.
(366) "X-ray subsystem"
means a combination of two (2) or more components of an x-ray system.
(367) "X-ray system" means an assemblage of
components for the controlled production of x-rays. It includes an x-ray
high-voltage generator, an x-ray control, a tube housing assembly, a
beam-limiting device, and necessary supporting structures. Additional
components that function with the system are considered integral parts of the
system.
(368) "X-ray tube" means an
electron tube designed to be used primarily for the production of
x-rays.
(369) "Year" means the
period of time, beginning in January, used to determine compliance with the
provisions of 902 KAR Chapter 100. The licensee or registrant may change the
starting date of the year used to determine compliance by the licensee or
registrant if:
(a) The change is made at the
beginning of the year; and
(b) A
day is not omitted or duplicated in consecutive years.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY:
KRS
194A.050,
211.090(3),
211.844,
10
C.F.R. 20.1003-20.1005