Topographic x-ray diffraction images of ultrasonic waves in a thick silicon crystal are presented. The stationary nodal pattern of an acoustic field in the crystal is displayed, including that due to a set of plane standing waves. The images were achieved by making use of the anomalous transmission of x rays, and are of preliminary nature.
The Borrmann effect (the anomalous transmission of x rays through thick perfect crystals) has been used as the primary diffraction in a study of simultaneous diffraction. The major part of the work is an analysis of multiple diffraction using the dynamical theory of x-ray diffraction. In the analysis we have utilized the concept of normal modes in describing the propagation of the x-ray wave field. We have determined these modes when the Bragg condition is exactly and simultaneously satisfied for all the diffracting planes. The particular configuration studied was one in which only three noncoplanar waves have appreciable amplitudes. We have shown that at least one of the proper modes of any three-field case of the type considered is a nonabsorbing mode of propagation (i.e., having nodes of the electric field at the atomic planes). This indicates that the primary anomalous transmission will persist with little or no change in intensity when a third reciprocal lattice point enters the Ewald sphere. In particular, when the third reciprocal lattice point is of the same family as the primary, simultaneous anomalous transmission is predicted. For this case, a relatively small change in the primary reflected beam and a twofold enhancement of the forward beam is calculated which are seen to be due to a superposition of two degenerate Borrmann effects having a common forward diffraction direction. Experimental results using polarized and unpolarized incident radiation are presented and discussed. 9 E. J. Saccocio and A. Zajac, Acta Cryst. 18, 478 (1965). 10 E. J. Saccocio, Ph.D. thesis, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1964 (unpublished).
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