1968
DOI: 10.1107/s0567739468000951
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Polarization of crystal monochromated X-rays

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Cited by 38 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…It can then be taken into account through a convolution with the beam divergence. More detailed discussion may be found in papers by Jennings (1968), Suortti & Paakkari (1968), Olekhnovich (1969Olekhnovich ( , 1970, Paakkari et al (1970), and Linkoaho et al (1971).…”
Section: Polarization Ratiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It can then be taken into account through a convolution with the beam divergence. More detailed discussion may be found in papers by Jennings (1968), Suortti & Paakkari (1968), Olekhnovich (1969Olekhnovich ( , 1970, Paakkari et al (1970), and Linkoaho et al (1971).…”
Section: Polarization Ratiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the scattering in the monochromator obeys the kinematic theory, the polarization ratio will simply be cos220a, where 0 a is the Bragg angle; if the monochromator is perfect, the polarization ratio will be cos 20 a. However, as has been pointed out by Jennings (1968Jennings ( , 1981, when severe extinction occurs in a mosaic crystal, much of the incident energy of each polarization will be diffracted and the polarization ratio could approach unity. Le Page, Gabe & Calvert (1979) have described a method of experimentally determining polarization ratios and obtained values greater than cos 20 a for Cu Ka and Mo Ka radiations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The left-hand horizontal hatched region shows that the assumption of a Lorentzian mosaic distribution does not qualitatively change the behavior, though it does increase the fraction of the reflection curve for which extinction effects are not severe. The results also do not depend strongly on m for m > ½ (Jennings, 1968). The upper curve is Ka vs (Q'/Q) (o(Q'/21arl) for the dislocation model in symmetrical reflection.…”
Section: Experimental Situationmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The polarization ratio is thus approximately unity. This result has been known for some time (Jennings, 1968). It is, however, often overlooked in crystallographic applications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%