_version_ 1866911949901529088
author Solov'yov, Andrey V.
Verkhovtsev, Alexey V.
Mason, Nigel J.
Amos, Richard A.
Bald, Ilko
Baldacchino, Gérard
Dromey, Brendan
Falk, Martin
Fedor, Juraj
Gerhards, Luca
Hausmann, Michael
Hildenbrand, Georg
Hrabovský, Miloš
Kadlec, Stanislav
Kočišek, Jaroslav
Lépine, Franck
Ming, Siyi
Nisbet, Andrew
Ricketts, Kate
Sala, Leo
Schlathölter, Thomas
Wheatley, Andrew
Solov'yov, Ilia A.
author_facet Solov'yov, Andrey V.
Verkhovtsev, Alexey V.
Mason, Nigel J.
Amos, Richard A.
Bald, Ilko
Baldacchino, Gérard
Dromey, Brendan
Falk, Martin
Fedor, Juraj
Gerhards, Luca
Hausmann, Michael
Hildenbrand, Georg
Hrabovský, Miloš
Kadlec, Stanislav
Kočišek, Jaroslav
Lépine, Franck
Ming, Siyi
Nisbet, Andrew
Ricketts, Kate
Sala, Leo
Schlathölter, Thomas
Wheatley, Andrew
Solov'yov, Ilia A.
contents This paper reviews the new highly interdisciplinary research field studying the behavior of condensed matter systems exposed to radiation. The paper highlights several relevant examples of recent advances in the field and provides a roadmap for the development of the field in the next decade. Condensed matter systems exposed to radiation may have very different natures, being inorganic, organic or biological, finite or infinite, be composed of many different molecular species or materials, existing in different phases (solid, liquid, gaseous or plasma) and operating under different thermodynamic conditions. The essential and novel element of this research is that, despite the vast diversity of such systems, many of the key phenomena related to the behavior of irradiated systems (such as radiation-induced damage, mechanisms of damage repair and control, radiation protection, etc.) are very similar and can be understood based on the same fundamental theoretical principles and computational approaches. One of the essential features of the aforementioned phenomena concerns their multiscale nature as the manifestation of the radiation-induced effects occurring at different spatial and temporal scales ranging from the atomic to the macroscopic. The multiscale nature of the effects and similarity of their manifestation in systems of different origins necessarily brings together different disciplines, such as physics, chemistry, biology, materials and nano-science, and biomedical research, demonstrating numerous interlinks and commonalities between them. This research field is highly relevant to many novel and emerging technologies and medical applications.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2311_13402
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Condensed Matter Systems Exposed to Radiation: Multiscale Theory, Simulations, and Experiment
Solov'yov, Andrey V.
Verkhovtsev, Alexey V.
Mason, Nigel J.
Amos, Richard A.
Bald, Ilko
Baldacchino, Gérard
Dromey, Brendan
Falk, Martin
Fedor, Juraj
Gerhards, Luca
Hausmann, Michael
Hildenbrand, Georg
Hrabovský, Miloš
Kadlec, Stanislav
Kočišek, Jaroslav
Lépine, Franck
Ming, Siyi
Nisbet, Andrew
Ricketts, Kate
Sala, Leo
Schlathölter, Thomas
Wheatley, Andrew
Solov'yov, Ilia A.
Chemical Physics
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Atomic Physics
Biological Physics
Plasma Physics
This paper reviews the new highly interdisciplinary research field studying the behavior of condensed matter systems exposed to radiation. The paper highlights several relevant examples of recent advances in the field and provides a roadmap for the development of the field in the next decade. Condensed matter systems exposed to radiation may have very different natures, being inorganic, organic or biological, finite or infinite, be composed of many different molecular species or materials, existing in different phases (solid, liquid, gaseous or plasma) and operating under different thermodynamic conditions. The essential and novel element of this research is that, despite the vast diversity of such systems, many of the key phenomena related to the behavior of irradiated systems (such as radiation-induced damage, mechanisms of damage repair and control, radiation protection, etc.) are very similar and can be understood based on the same fundamental theoretical principles and computational approaches. One of the essential features of the aforementioned phenomena concerns their multiscale nature as the manifestation of the radiation-induced effects occurring at different spatial and temporal scales ranging from the atomic to the macroscopic. The multiscale nature of the effects and similarity of their manifestation in systems of different origins necessarily brings together different disciplines, such as physics, chemistry, biology, materials and nano-science, and biomedical research, demonstrating numerous interlinks and commonalities between them. This research field is highly relevant to many novel and emerging technologies and medical applications.
title Condensed Matter Systems Exposed to Radiation: Multiscale Theory, Simulations, and Experiment
topic Chemical Physics
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Atomic Physics
Biological Physics
Plasma Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.13402