Difference between revisions of "Scattering"
KevinYager (talk | contribs) (→TSAXS 1D) |
KevinYager (talk | contribs) (→Geometry) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==Geometry== | ==Geometry== | ||
− | |||
We define a vector in [[reciprocal-space]] as the difference between the incident and scattered x-ray beams. This new vector is the [[momentum transfer]], denoted by '''q''': | We define a vector in [[reciprocal-space]] as the difference between the incident and scattered x-ray beams. This new vector is the [[momentum transfer]], denoted by '''q''': | ||
:<math> | :<math> | ||
Line 23: | Line 22: | ||
Where <math>\scriptstyle 2 \theta_s </math> is the scattering angle. | Where <math>\scriptstyle 2 \theta_s </math> is the scattering angle. | ||
− | + | See also [[Geometry:TSAXS 3D]]. | |
− | |||
==Theory== | ==Theory== |
Revision as of 10:31, 30 December 2015
Scattering broadly refers to experimental techniques that use the interaction between radiation and matter to elucidate structure. In x-ray scattering, a collimated x-ray beam is directed at a sample of interest. The incident x-rays scatter off of all the atoms/particles in the sample. Because of the wavelike nature of x-rays (which are simply high-energy photons; i.e. electromagnetic rays), the scattered waves interfere with one another, leading to constructive interference at some angles, but destructive interference at other angles. The end result is a pattern of scattered radiation (as a function of angle with respect to the direct beam) that encodes the microscopic, nanoscopic, and molecular-scale structure of the sample.
Geometry
We define a vector in reciprocal-space as the difference between the incident and scattered x-ray beams. This new vector is the momentum transfer, denoted by q:
The length of this vector is:
Where is the scattering angle.
See also Geometry:TSAXS 3D.
Theory
The mathematical form of scattering is closely related to the Fourier transform. The sample's realspace density distribution is Fourier transformed into an abstract 3D reciprocal-space; scattering probes this inverse space. The fundamental equation in scattering is:
Where the observed scattering intensity (I) in the 3D reciprocal-space (q) is given by an ensemble average of the intensity for all (N) scattering entities probed by the beam. The wave-matter interaction is given by inner term, which coherently sums (interferes) the complex scattering contributions ( denotes the scattering power) of the N entities; the exponential term represents a plane wave (incident radiation). In integral form (for a continuous function of the scattering density ), we can write an integral over all of real-space:
The inner component can be thought of as the reciprocal-space:
This is mathematically identical to the (three-dimensional) Fourier transform.