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crystal diffraction - ترجمة إلى الروسية

BENDING OF ELECTRON BEAMS DUE TO ELECTROSTATIC INTERACTIONS WITH MATTER
Electron Diffraction; Electron Diffraction Spectroscopy
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  • bibcode=1939AnP...428..113K }}</ref>
  • '''Figure 12''': Diffraction pattern of [[magnesium]] simulated using CrysTBox for various crystal orientations.
  • '''Figure 10''': Diffraction patterns with different crystallinity and beam convergence. From left: spot diffraction, CBED, ring diffraction
  • '''Figure 26''': Kikuchi lines in an EBSD pattern of [[silicon]].
  • '''Figure 11''': Imaging scheme of magnetic lens (center) with magnified image (left) and diffraction pattern (right) formed in back focal plane
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  • '''Figure 7''': Ewald sphere construction for transmission electron diffraction, showing two of the Laue zones and the excitation error
  • '''Figure 25''': Gas electron diffraction pattern of [[benzene]].
  • '''Figure 16:''' Diffraction pattern down [0100] showing an incommensurate modulation in a mixed-valent manganite oxide sulfide
  • '''Figure 9''': Kikuchi map for a [[face centered cubic]] material, within the stereographic triangle
  • '''Figure 17:''' Single frame extracted from a video of a Nb<sub>0.83</sub>CoSb sample showing diffuse intensity (snake-like) due to vacancies at the Nb sites
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  • '''Figure 13''': Relation between spot and ring diffraction illustrated on 1 to 1000 grains of [[MgO]] using simulation engine of [[CrysTBox]]. Corresponding experimental patterns can be seen in '''Figure 14.'''
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  • '''Figure 4:''' Propagation of a wave packet demonstrating the movement of a bundle of waves; see [[group velocity]] for more details.

crystal diffraction      

общая лексика

дифракция на кристалле

crystal set         
  • amplitude modulated]] radio signal from the tuned circuit. The rapid oscillations are the [[radio frequency]] [[carrier wave]]. The [[audio signal]] (the sound) is contained in the slow variations ([[modulation]]) of the amplitude (hence the term amplitude modulation, AM) of the waves. This signal cannot be converted to sound by the earphone, because the audio excursions are the same on both sides of the axis, averaging out to zero, which would result in no net motion of the earphone's diaphragm. ''<span style="color:red;">(B)</span>'' The crystal conducts current better in one direction than the other, producing a signal whose amplitude does not average to zero but varies with the audio signal. ''<span style="color:red;">(C)</span>''  A bypass capacitor is used to remove the radio frequency carrier pulses, leaving the audio signal
  • Circuit diagram of a simple crystal radio.
  • Pictorial diagram from 1922 showing the circuit of a crystal radio. This common circuit did not use a tuning [[capacitor]], but used the capacitance of the antenna to form the [[tuned circuit]] with the coil. The detector was a [[cat whisker detector]], consisting of a piece of galena with a thin wire in contact with it on a part of the crystal, making a diode contact
  • A family listening to a crystal radio in the 1920s
  • Crystal radio used as a backup receiver on a World War II [[Liberty ship]]
  • Circuit with detector bias battery to improve sensitivity and buzzer to aid in adjustment of the cat whisker
  • Block diagram of a crystal radio receiver
  • Amateur-built crystal receiver with "loose coupler" antenna transformer, Belfast, around 1914
  • Direct-coupled circuit with taps for impedance matching<ref name="Klase" />
  • "Foxhole radio" used on the Italian Front in World War 2. It uses a pencil lead attached to a safety pin pressing against a razor blade for a detector.
  • Greenleaf Whittier Pickard's US Patent 836,531 "Means for receiving intelligence communicated by electric waves" diagram
  • [[Germanium diode]] used in modern crystal radios (about 3 mm long)
  • 1600 ohm magnetic headset.
  • Inductively-coupled circuit with impedance matching. This type was used in most quality crystal receivers in the early 20th century
  • Galena crystal detector
  • publisher =U.S. Government Printing Office}}</ref>
  • piezoelectric earphone]]
  • Crystal radio (1915) kept at the Museum of the radio - [[Monteceneri]] (Switzerland)
  • The earliest crystal receiver circuit did not have a [[tuned circuit]]
  • Arrow]] crystal radio marketed to children. The earphone is on left.  The antenna wire, right, has a clip to attach to metal objects such as a bedspring, which serve as an additional antenna to improve reception.
SIMPLE RADIO RECEIVER CIRCUIT USED MOSTLY FOR AM RECEPTION
Crystal set; Diode detector; Crystal sets; Crystal Radio; Crystal radio receiver; Crystadine; Crystodine; Crystal receiver

['kristlset]

радиотехника

детекторный приёмник

hypidiomorphic         
  • stable]] faces, where new atoms cannot as easily attach themselves.
  • A subhedral sample showing sharp to anhedral [[pyrargyrite]] crystals.
WELL-FORMED CRYSTAL WITH SHARP AND WELL DEVELOPED FACES
Euhedral; Anhedral (petrology); Subhedral; Euhedral crystal; Anhedral crystals; Automorphic crystal; Idiomorphic; Idiomorph; Hypidiomorphic; Hypautomorphic

общая лексика

гипидиоморфный

تعريف

crystal set
¦ noun a simple early form of radio receiver with a crystal touching a metal wire as the rectifier and lacking an amplifier or loudspeaker, necessitating headphones or an earphone.

ويكيبيديا

Electron diffraction

Electron diffraction refers to changes in the direction of electron beams due to interactions with atoms. The resulting map of the directions of the electrons after they have interacted is called a diffraction pattern. It is similar to x-ray and neutron diffraction.

Electron diffraction occurs due to elastic scattering, when there is no change in the energy of the electrons during their interactions with atoms. The negatively charged electrons are scattered due to Coulomb forces when they interact with both the positively charged atomic core and the negatively charged electrons around the atoms; most of the interaction occurs quite close to the atoms, within about one Angstrom. In comparison, x-rays are scattered after interactions with the electron density while neutrons are scattered by the atomic nuclei through the strong nuclear force.

More rigorous details are given later; as a simple introduction, all matter can be thought of as waves, from small particles such as electrons up to chocolate brownies -- although it is impossible to measure any of the "wave-like" behavior of a brownie. Waves can move around objects and create interference patterns. A classic example is the Young's two-slit experiment shown in Figure 2, where a wave impinges upon two slits in the first of the two images. After going through the slits there are directions where the wave is stronger, ones where it is weaker -- the wave has been diffracted. If instead of two slits there are a number of small points then similar phenomena can occur as shown in the second image where the wave is coming in from the bottom right corner. This is comparable to diffraction of an electron wave where the small dots would be atoms. A map of the directions of the electron waves leaving the sample will show high intensity (white) for favored directions, such as the three prominent ones in the Young's slits experiment of Figure 2, while the other directions will be low intensity (dark). Often there will be an array of spots (preferred directions) as in Figure 1 and the other figures shown later.

The most common use of electron diffraction is in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with thin samples of tens to at most a thousand atoms in thickness, that is 1 nanometer to 100 nanometers. Some details on methods for sample preparation of thin samples can be found in the book by Edington, within journal publications, in the unpublished literature and within the page transmission electron microscopy. There are many different ways to collect diffraction information in a TEM such as selected area, convergent beam, precession and 4D STEM as described below. There are also many other types of instruments. For instance, in scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron backscatter diffraction is used to determine crystal orientation across the sample. Electron diffraction can also be used to characterize molecules using gas electron diffraction, surfaces using lower energy electrons, a technique called LEED, and by reflecting electrons off surfaces, a technique called RHEED.

There are also many levels of analysis and explanation of electron diffraction, elements of which are described later. These include:

  1. The simplest approximation using the de Broglie wavelength for electrons, where only the geometry is considered and often Bragg's law is invoked.
  2. The first level of more accuracy where it is approximated that the electrons are only scattered once, which is called kinematical diffraction.
  3. More complete and accurate explanations where multiple scattering is included, what is called dynamical diffraction (e.g. refs).

Unlike x-ray diffraction and neutron diffraction where the simplest approximations are quite accurate, with electron diffraction this is not the case. Simple models give the geometry of the intensities in a diffraction pattern, but higher level ones are needed for many details and the intensities -- numbers matter.

What is the الروسية for crystal diffraction? Translation of &#39crystal diffraction&#39 to الروسية