The PRISME team is composed of physicists, biochemists, biologists and radiotherapists. We specialize in multidisciplinary research aimed at developing, optimizing and controlling innovative radiotherapies, whether it be hadrontherapy or therapies using radioactive ion-emitting elements or nanoparticles. These radiotherapies aim to improve the treatment of certain cancers by increasing the effect of ionizing radiation in the tumor while minimizing its harmful effects on healthy tissues.
Our multidisciplinary approach aims to quantify, understand and predict the effect of ionizing radiation on living organisms from processes induced at extremely short times (attosecond) at small scales (atomic nucleus) to long-term consequences (years) at the patient level.
We therefore design and carry out irradiation experiments on targets ranging from molecules or cells to small animals and patient samples (tumor, blood). These experiments feed an important part of our activity which consists in modeling the effects of radiation on living organisms.
One of the innovative techniques of radiotherapy is hadrontherapy, which is to send
an ion beam on the tumors to destroy them. We are working, in particular using simulations, data processing and predictions, to improve these systems by having on-line control over irradiation using dedicated detectors. These tools also have applications in imaging.
The activities can be divided into three research areas:
Axis 1 aims to develop simulations and detectors to control patient irradiation by detecting the particles emitted during hadrontherapy treatment. These developments also offer application prospects in the field of diagnostic imaging.
Axis 2 focuses on the development of multi-scale models and simulations to describe and predict the physical, chemical and biological processes induced by irradiation. It also develops irradiation and dosimetric control means for the measurement of radiobiological effects.
Axis 3 quantifies by experiment the effects induced by irradiation with molecular, cellular, multicellular, in-vitro or in-vivo systems. It focuses on the specificities of innovative radiotherapies and the personalization of care.
NON-PERMANENTS:
- DOCTORANTS / DOCTORAL STUDENTS:
- CHERCHEURS NON-PERMANENTS / NON-PERMANENT RESEARCHERS:
- E. Testa, D. Dauvergne, G. Dedes, P. Force, N. Freud, et al.. Imaging system for QA: present status and future prospects. 2nd NIRS-ETOILE symposium, Nov 2011, Lyon, France. ⟨in2p3-00715886⟩
- Maurice Robert Kibler, Mohammed Daoud. Generalized Coherent States for Polynomial Weyl-Heisenberg Algebras. Physics Conference TIM-11, Nov 2011, Timisoara, Romania. pp.60-69, ⟨10.1063/1.4748069⟩. ⟨in2p3-00658017⟩
- D. Autiero. Measurement of the Neutrino Velocity with the OPERA Detector in the CNGS Beam. OPERA vs Maxwell and Einstein Event, Nov 2011, Londres, United Kingdom. ⟨in2p3-00772495⟩
- D. Davesne. Tensor coupling linear response and stability criterion for Skyrme EDF. International Symposium on Physics of Unstable Nuclei - ISPUN 2011, Nov 2011, Hanoi, Vietnam. ⟨in2p3-00740150⟩
- O. Bondu. Photon energy scale determination and commissioning with radiative Z decays. Hadron Collider Physics Symposium 2011 (HCP 2011), Nov 2011, Paris, France. ⟨in2p3-00967140⟩
- J. Marteau. Expérience OPERA : des Neutrinos, pas si Elémentaires. MidiSciences, Nov 2011, Grenoble, France. ⟨in2p3-00772518⟩
- H. Brun. Higgs in gamma gamma search in CMS. Hadron Collider Physics Symposium 2011 (HCP 2011), Nov 2011, Paris, France. ⟨in2p3-00967586⟩
- O. Stézowski. PARIS Detector Status. 5th LEA-COLLIGA Meeting, Nov 2011, Orsay, France. ⟨in2p3-00763740⟩
- Raphaël Dupré. Quark Fragmentation and Hadron Formation in Nuclear Matter. Other [cond-mat.other]. Université Claude Bernard - Lyon I, 2011. English. ⟨NNT : 2011LYO10221⟩. ⟨tel-00751424⟩
- D. Benjamin, E. James, T. Junk, N. Krumnack, W. Yao, et al.. Combined CDF and D0 upper limits on gg->H W+W- and constraints on the Higgs boson mass in fourth-generation fermion models with up to 8.2 fb-1 of data. 2011. ⟨in2p3-00638830⟩