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  2. Stochastic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic

    Stochastic effect, or "chance effect" is one classification of radiation effects that refers to the random, statistical nature of the damage. In contrast to the deterministic effect, severity is independent of dose. Only the probability of an effect increases with dose.

  3. Stochastic quantum mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_quantum_mechanics

    Stochastic mechanics is the framework concerned with the construction of such stochastic processes that generate a probability measure for quantum mechanics. For a Brownian motion, it is known that the statistical fluctuations of a Brownian particle are often induced by the interaction of the particle with a large number of microscopic particles.

  4. Linear no-threshold model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_no-threshold_model

    The linear no-threshold model (LNT) is a dose-response model used in radiation protection to estimate stochastic health effects such as radiation-induced cancer, genetic mutations and teratogenic effects on the human body due to exposure to ionizing radiation. The model assumes a linear relationship between dose and health effects, even for ...

  5. Stochastic process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_process

    The term stochastic process first appeared in English in a 1934 paper by Joseph Doob. [60] For the term and a specific mathematical definition, Doob cited another 1934 paper, where the term stochastischer Prozeß was used in German by Aleksandr Khinchin, [63] [64] though the German term had been used earlier, for example, by Andrei Kolmogorov ...

  6. Radiation protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_protection

    The application of radiation can aid the patient by providing doctors and other health care professionals with a medical diagnosis, but the exposure of the patient should be reasonably low enough to keep the statistical probability of cancers or sarcomas (stochastic effects) below an acceptable level, and to eliminate deterministic effects (e.g ...

  7. Roentgen equivalent man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roentgen_equivalent_man

    Ionizing radiation has deterministic and stochastic effects on human health. The deterministic effects that can lead to acute radiation syndrome only occur in the case of high doses (> ~10 rad or > 0.1 Gy) and high dose rates (> ~10 rad/h or > 0.1 Gy/h). A model of deterministic risk would require different weighting factors (not yet ...

  8. Stochastic differential equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_differential...

    A stochastic differential equation (SDE) is a differential equation in which one or more of the terms is a stochastic process, [1] resulting in a solution which is also a stochastic process. SDEs have many applications throughout pure mathematics and are used to model various behaviours of stochastic models such as stock prices , [ 2 ] random ...

  9. Stochastic thermodynamics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_thermodynamics

    Stochastic thermodynamics is an emergent field of research in statistical mechanics that uses stochastic variables to better understand the non-equilibrium dynamics present in many microscopic systems [1] such as colloidal particles, biopolymers (e.g. DNA, RNA, and proteins), enzymes, and molecular motors.