Gloria,
I think this one might be modulated, you can clearly distinguish Bragg
and satellite reflections.
-j.
On Wed, 2015-04-01 at 07:06 -0500, Gloria Borgstahl wrote:
> Ah Ha!
>
>
> drum roll
>
>
> A quasicrystal !
>
> On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 7:00 AM, Julia Griese wrote:
>
These diffraction patterns, called "matzo" (Hebrew: מַצָּה) have been
observed already by the ancient jews, and it is thought that the
invention of the millstone (see http://galleryhip.com/millstone.html) is
a consequence of early detector technology to produce these images.
Andrea.
On 01/04
Working at the MAX IV Laboratory (as it is called these days) I can indeed
confirm it is a Swedish pattern, but I have not yet found a trace of the data
itself, so I am not so sure it was collected here...
However, as we will open the brightest synchrotron source in the world next
year, we can
These last puns just take the biscuit!
Derek
On 1 Apr 2015, at 16:52, David Briggs
mailto:drdavidcbri...@gmail.com>> wrote:
This looks like a tough cookie.
IMO you'd be crackers to persist with this crystal form. It's certainly not
going to be a piece of cake.
Dr David C Briggs PhD
http://a
This looks like a tough cookie.
IMO you'd be crackers to persist with this crystal form. It's certainly not
going to be a piece of cake.
Dr David C Briggs PhD
http://about.me/david_briggs
On 1 Apr 2015 12:07, "Keller, Jacob" wrote:
> Can anyone index this? It's got mostly split spots and a stra
Hi Julia,
This was clearly taken at MAXlab, since it's a very distinct Swedish
pattern. I would guess I911-2, unless of course it is a very old one from
I711.
There was a problem once, where the header of the file didn't get written
correctly.
Can you index it if you manually guess the beam posit
I think we used the same version of Mosflm when we managed to solve this
strange pattern.
[cid:4EF3709E-41D5-4A38-8CE9-064D75929422@uefad.uef.fi]
Helena Taberman, M.Sc.
University of Eastern Finland
Department of Chemistry
Joensuu Campus
P.O. Box 111
FI-80101 Joensuu, FINLAND
Mobile: +358 50
Have you tried Shake-and-Bake? An old program, but works great when you
have mixed real and reciprocal space cake.
Keller, Jacob schreef:
> Can anyone index this? It's got mostly split spots and a strange diffuse
> scattering background
>
> JPK
>
> ***
>
--
Dr. Aaron Finke
Postdoctoral Fellow
Swiss Light Source
WSLA/217
CH-5232 Villigen-PSI
phone: +41 56 310 5652
e-mail: aaron.fi...@psi.ch
On Apr 1, 2015, at 13:03, Keller, Jacob wrote:
> Can anyone index this? It's got mostly split spots and a strange diff
Ah Ha!
drum roll
A quasicrystal !
On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 7:00 AM, Julia Griese wrote:
> This one appears to be of a similar age. It has a most puzzling, but
> pretty pentagonal pattern (and a backstop). Unfortunately Mosflm doesn't
> appear to support the image format.
>
> /Julia
>
>
>
This one appears to be of a similar age. It has a most puzzling, but
pretty pentagonal pattern (and a backstop). Unfortunately Mosflm doesn't
appear to support the image format.
/Julia
On 01/04/15 13:08, Harry Powell wrote:
Hi Jacob
I noticed that there's no backstop shadow that might give
no, and that’s why they all needed to be stored at Diamond in case future
generations have better programs. And this applies also to those that have
already been digested - I mean, processed.
Adrian
On 01 Apr 2015, at 12:03, Keller, Jacob wrote:
> Can anyone index this? It's got mostly spli
Hi Jacob
I noticed that there's no backstop shadow that might give a clue as to the
direct beam position.
Do you know what wavelength radiation was used to bake this?
On 1 Apr 2015, at 12:03, Keller, Jacob wrote:
> Can anyone index this? It's got mostly split spots and a strange diffuse
> sca
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