positron Posted June 8, 2006 Posted June 8, 2006 I know that when a beam of x-rays strike a crystal (covalent network lattice) that they will be reflected off in layers so that the resulting wavefront is in phase with all other waves. However, i have found 2 equations that are associated with this concept and am not sure which is the correct to use. Theres: {d sin(theta) = n * (lambda)} and {n * (lambda) = 2d sin(theta)} Can u tell me which is the appropriate equation and what the other one would be for. btw. soz for not using symbols, I would if i knew how
Klaynos Posted June 8, 2006 Posted June 8, 2006 [math]2dSin\theta = n \lambda[/math] That's the bragg diffraction equation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bragg_diffraction I'm not familiar with the one without 2 in it...
swansont Posted June 8, 2006 Posted June 8, 2006 The one without the 2 in it looks like Fraunhofer diffraction (e.g. through a slit). Click on the diffraction link of the Wiki article Klaynos provided.
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