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  2. X-ray crystallography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_crystallography

    A powder X-ray diffractometer in motion. X-ray crystallography is the experimental science of determining the atomic and molecular structure of a crystal, in which the crystalline structure causes a beam of incident X-rays to diffract in specific directions.

  3. Molecular replacement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_replacement

    Molecular replacement (MR) [1] is a method of solving the phase problem in X-ray crystallography.MR relies upon the existence of a previously solved protein structure which is similar to our unknown structure from which the diffraction data is derived.

  4. Patterson function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patterson_function

    The Patterson function is used to solve the phase problem in X-ray crystallography. It was introduced in 1935 by Arthur Lindo Patterson while he was a visiting researcher in the laboratory of Bertram Eugene Warren at MIT. [1] [2] The Patterson function is defined as

  5. Powder diffraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powder_diffraction

    The simplest cameras for X-ray powder diffraction consist of a small capillary and either a flat plate detector (originally a piece of X-ray film, now more and more a flat-plate detector or a CCD-camera) or a cylindrical one (originally a piece of film in a cookie-jar, but increasingly bent position sensitive detectors are used). The two types ...

  6. Absolute configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_configuration

    Absolute configurations for a chiral molecule (in pure form) are most often obtained by X-ray crystallography, although with some important limitations. All enantiomerically pure chiral molecules crystallise in one of the 65 Sohncke groups (chiral space groups).

  7. Bragg's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bragg's_law

    The measurement of the angles can be used to determine crystal structure, see x-ray crystallography for more details. [5] [13] As a simple example, Bragg's law, as stated above, can be used to obtain the lattice spacing of a particular cubic system through the following relation:

  8. X-ray optics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_optics

    X-ray optics is the branch of optics dealing with X-rays, rather than visible light.It deals with focusing and other ways of manipulating the X-ray beams for research techniques such as X-ray diffraction, X-ray crystallography, X-ray fluorescence, small-angle X-ray scattering, X-ray microscopy, X-ray phase-contrast imaging, and X-ray astronomy.

  9. Cryogenic electron microscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryogenic_electron_microscopy

    Though X-ray crystallography has drastically more total deposits due to a decades-longer history, total deposits of the two methods are projected to eclipse around 2035. [16] The resolution of X-ray crystallography is limited by crystal homogeneity, [17] and coaxing biological molecules with unknown ideal crystallization conditions into a ...