Abstract
The absorbed dose is defined by the ICRU [International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements]. It is a nonstochastic quantity and can, in principle, be calculated. In calculations complete knowledge about the radiation field and the details of interaction processes are required provided no kind of radiation equilibrium exists. They are considerably simplified by restricting them to, in particular, those states of equilibrium existing within a homogeneous medium in which particles are generated uniformly. Absorbed dose equations are derived for the general case and for various cases of equilibria existing due to the uniform liberation of different groups of ionizing particles in a homogeneous medium. The concept of equilibrium is thoroughly analyzed. Corresponding evaluations of absorbed dose are reviewed. A clear exposition of the concepts of absorbed dose and equilibrium is given for educational use. These concepts are vital to improve numerical calculations of the absorbed dose in, for instance, cavity theories. The definition of mass energy absorption coefficients for photons and the expression for the absorbed dose in the Spencer-Attix cavity theory are elucidated.