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External beam radiotherapy is the most common form of radiotherapy where a patient lies on a couch and an external source of X-rays is pointed at a particular part of the body. The radiation interacts with tissues and is absorbed, damaging the DNA of the cell.
The source of the X-rays can be from a radioactive source such as cobalt-60, iridium-137, caesium or radium-226 (which is no longer available). Such X-rays are monochromatic and called gamma rays. The usual energy range is in the 300keV to 1.5MeV range.
The other source of X-rays are from machines that generate them, and there are two basic varieties used now:
A third variety called the 'superficial X-rays - 20-50 thousand electron volts or keV