Dear Tim,
That is described by the Laue interference function. The crystal
diffracts in Bragg directions (reflections) at small deviations of the
Bragg angle and in a small solid angle. They depend on lambda and
lambda^2 respectively, and integration over these angles brings a factor
lambda^3 in the diffracted intensity.
Best wishes,
Loes
On 01/26/17 17:15, Tim Gruene wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> according to Carmelo Giacovazzo's textbook (eq. 3.41 in the 1st edition), the
> diffraction intensity I(hkl) scales with the wavelength cubed (lambda^3).
>
> 1) is there an easy rationale for this dependency?
> 2) does it hold over a wide range of energies?
> 3) does this also hold for neutrons or electrons as radiation source?
>
> Thanks a lot for any helpful comment,
> Tim
--
__________________________________________
Dr. Loes Kroon-Batenburg
Dept. of Crystal and Structural Chemistry
Bijvoet Center for Biomolecular Research
Utrecht University
Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht
The Netherlands
E-mail : [log in to unmask]
phone : +31-30-2532865
fax : +31-30-2533940
__________________________________________
|