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| \begin{alignat}{2} | | \begin{alignat}{2} |
| \frac{q^2}{k^2} | | \frac{q^2}{k^2} |
| + | & = \frac{x^2}{d^2+x^2} \frac{d^4}{d^2+z^2 \cos^2 \theta_f} + \left ( \frac{d^2}{\sqrt{d^2+x^2}} \frac{d^2}{\sqrt{d^2+z^2 \cos^2 \theta_f}} - 1 \right )^2 + \frac{z^2 }{d^2+z^2 \cos^2 \theta_f } \frac{d^4}{d^2+x^2} \\ |
| & = ? \\ | | & = ? \\ |
| & = ? \\ | | & = ? \\ |
Revision as of 18:37, 29 December 2015
The q-vector in fact has three components:
Consider that the x-ray beam points along +y, so that on the detector, the horizontal is x, and the vertical is z. We assume that the x-ray beam hits the flat 2D area detector at 90° at detector (pixel) position . The scattering angles are then:
where is the sample-detector distance, is the out-of-plane component (angle w.r.t. to y-axis, rotation about x-axis), and is the in-plane component (rotation about z-axis). The alternate angle, , is the elevation angle in the plane defined by . Also note that the full scattering angle is:
The momentum transfer components are:
Check
As a check of these results, consider:
Where we used:
And, we further note that:
Continuing: