Summary
Induction of structural chromosome aberrations was studied in human peripheral blood lymphocytes irradiated in the unstimulated state with ultrasoft X-rays. Aluminium K X-rays (1·49 keV) and carbon K X-rays (0·28 keV) were used. The frequencies of dicentric aberrations and of excess acentric fragments were found to increase approximately linearly with absorbed dose of both radiations. Carbon X-rays were more effective than aluminium X-rays. The corresponding linear yield coefficients for dicentrics are (3·7 × 10−1) Gy−1 and (2·2 × 10−1) Gy−1 respectively. At low doses both these radiations are more effective than hard X-rays in producing dicentric aberrations, but at high doses aluminium X-rays are less effective than hard X-rays because of the large positive curvature of the hard X-ray dose-response. The most significant observation of these experiments is that electrons of less than 280 eV, produced by carbon X-rays, are efficient in producing dicentric aberrations. This implies that single local energy events of about 14 ionizations within less than 7 nm are able to produce exchange aberrations.