But I thought what you wanted was to reconstruct the diffraction pattern
(i.e. streaks, TDS, ice rings, zingers, warts & all) as a
pseudo-precession image, not just display a representation of the
integrated intensities. That surely would be much more useful, then one
could see whether the apparent systematic absence violations were just
streaks from adjacent spots, TDS, ice spots etc that have fooled the
integration algorithm. That would be much more useful! In the days
when we had real precession cameras this was how you assigned the space
group.
Cheers
-- Ian
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [log in to unmask] [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On
> Behalf Of Francis E Reyes
> Sent: 25 June 2009 17:32
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] From oscillation photographs to seeing specific
> sections of reciprocal lattice.
>
> Thanks all who replied.
>
> Looks like HKLView is it..
>
>
>
> Oddly I couldnt find it anywhere in the ccp4i interface (shouldn't it
> at least appear under Program List)?
>
> FR
>
> On Jun 25, 2009, at 10:24 AM, Francis E Reyes wrote:
>
> > Hi all
> >
> > Is there software that will take oscillation photographs and
> > construct a precession-like photo of specific layers of the
> > reciprocal lattice (say h0l), for inspection of the systematic
> > absences, etc?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > FR
> >
> > ---------------------------------------------
> > Francis Reyes M.Sc.
> > 215 UCB
> > University of Colorado at Boulder
> >
> > gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys 67BA8D5D
> >
> > 8AE2 F2F4 90F7 9640 28BC 686F 78FD 6669 67BA 8D5D
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> Francis Reyes M.Sc.
> 215 UCB
> University of Colorado at Boulder
>
> gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys 67BA8D5D
>
> 8AE2 F2F4 90F7 9640 28BC 686F 78FD 6669 67BA 8D5D
Disclaimer
This communication is confidential and may contain privileged information intended solely for the named addressee(s). It may not be used or disclosed except for the purpose for which it has been sent. If you are not the intended recipient you must not review, use, disclose, copy, distribute or take any action in reliance upon it. If you have received this communication in error, please notify Astex Therapeutics Ltd by emailing [log in to unmask] and destroy all copies of the message and any attached documents.
Astex Therapeutics Ltd monitors, controls and protects all its messaging traffic in compliance with its corporate email policy. The Company accepts no liability or responsibility for any onward transmission or use of emails and attachments having left the Astex Therapeutics domain. Unless expressly stated, opinions in this message are those of the individual sender and not of Astex Therapeutics Ltd. The recipient should check this email and any attachments for the presence of computer viruses. Astex Therapeutics Ltd accepts no liability for damage caused by any virus transmitted by this email. E-mail is susceptible to data corruption, interception, unauthorized amendment, and tampering, Astex Therapeutics Ltd only send and receive e-mails on the basis that the Company is not liable for any such alteration or any consequences thereof.
Astex Therapeutics Ltd., Registered in England at 436 Cambridge Science Park, Cambridge CB4 0QA under number 3751674
|