The absorption length or attenuation length in x-ray scattering is the distance over which the x-ray beam is absorbed. By convention, the absorption length ϵ is defined as the distance into a material where the beam flux has dropped to 1/e of its incident flux.
Absorption
The absorption follows a simple Beer-Lambert law:

The attenuation coefficient (or absorption coefficient) is simply the inverse of the absorption length; 

Calculating
The absorption length arises from the imaginary part of the atomic scattering factor, f2. It is closely related to the absorption cross-section, and the mass absorption coefficient. Specifically, the atomic photoabsorption cross-section can be computed via:

Where λ is the x-ray wavelength, and re is the classical electron radius. The attenuation coefficient is given by:

where ρ is density, Na is the Avogadro constant, and ma is the atomic molar mass. Note that the mass attenuation coefficient is simply 
.
Related forms
As can be seen, there are many related quantities which express the material's absorption:
- Absorption length 
, the distance over which the intensity falls to 1/e. 
- Attenuation coefficient 
, the characteristic inverse-distance for attenuation. 
- Mass attenuation coefficient 
, the density-scaled attenuation. 
- Absorptive atomic scattering factor 
, the intrinsic dissipative interaction of the material. 
- Atomic photoabsorption cross-section 
, the cross-section ('effective size') of the atom's x-ray absorption (capture) efficiency. 
- Imaginary refractive index 
, the resonant component of the refractive index. 
- Imaginary Scattering Length Density 
, the absorptive component of the scattering contrast. 
 
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See Also