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| ==DWBA Equation in thin film== | | ==DWBA Equation in thin film== |
| Using the notation <math>T_i = T(\alpha_i)</math> for compactness, the DWBA equation inside a thin film can be written: | | Using the notation <math>T_i = T(\alpha_i)</math> for compactness, the DWBA equation inside a thin film can be written: |
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| <math> | | <math> |
| \begin{align} | | \begin{align} |
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| ==Expansion== | | ==Expansion== |
| If one expands the <math>|\ellipsis}^2</math> of the DWBA, one obtains 16 terms: | | If one expands the <math>|\ellipsis}^2</math> of the DWBA, one obtains 16 terms: |
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| <math> | | <math> |
| + | tbd |
| </math> | | </math> |
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| The equation can thus be written as: | | The equation can thus be written as: |
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| <math> | | <math> |
| \begin{align} | | \begin{align} |
Revision as of 17:06, 6 March 2018
DWBA Equation in thin film
Using the notation for compactness, the DWBA equation inside a thin film can be written:
Expansion
If one expands the Failed to parse (MathML with SVG or PNG fallback (recommended for modern browsers and accessibility tools): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle |\ellipsis}^2}
of the DWBA, one obtains 16 terms:
The equation can thus be written as:
We can rearrange to: