James

In 1915, I thought Debye and Scherrer were testing for interference between the 
electrons in different orbits within atoms. This was in order to test the Bohr 
model. They got rings but they were powder diffraction rings. The method never 
did identify planetary type orbitals. However Debye eventually adjusted his 
aims and the method did become useful despite "the requirement for objects to 
force themselves into ordered arrays" 

Was there some other key observation Debye made in 1915 which you refer to?

Colin




-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of James 
Holton
Sent: 19 April 2013 18:27
To: ccp4bb
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] popular piece on X-ray crystallography

Because there is never more than one photon "in flight" at any given time.  
Even at 1 photon/s, we still eventually get spots.

Atoms also don't emit synchrotron radiation, despite there being charged 
particles accelerating around their little "orbits" in there.

But yes, in 1913, people were still hoping there was another explanation for 
these two observations, other than that pesky quantum theory.  It was in 1915 
that Debye made the key observation that collapsed determinism as we knew it.  
I don't think he was very happy about that.  
Neither was Einstein.

-James Holton
MAD Scientist

On 4/19/2013 9:43 AM, Tim Gruene wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Hello Bernhard,
>
> could you explain this? A photon is the exchange particle of the 
> electromagnetic force, i.e. as soon as you have more than two charged 
> particles interacting there is more than one photon - why is it 
> incorrect to use the term "multi-photon process" in the context of 
> X-ray diffraction?
>
> Cheers,
> Tim
>
> On 04/19/2013 06:19 PM, Bernhard Rupp (Hofkristallrat a.D.) wrote:
>> However, a reviewer could reject the method on theoretical grounds
>> - the explanation of X-ray diffraction as a multi-photon process is 
>> not correct....
>>
>> BR
>>
>> -----Original Message----- From: CCP4 bulletin board 
>> [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Peter Artymiuk Sent:
>> Friday, April 19, 2013 7:11 AM To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK Subject:
>> Re: [ccp4bb] popular piece on X-ray crystallography
>>
>> Just to clarify, Jeremy was not being serious, but imagining what an 
>> awkward / obnoxious grant reviewer might have said in 1913. But your 
>> points would be valuable in rebutting such a view
>>
>> Pete
>>
>>
>>
>> On 19 Apr 2013, at 11:28, Navdeep Sidhu wrote:
>>
>>> Dear Pet,
>>>
>>> On the contrary, far as I know, nature seems to require most solids 
>>> we see around us to be crystalline. And much of the rest is either 
>>> gaseous or plasma. Hence, by the reasoning proposed, we are led to 
>>> suspect a different conclusion: that it's studies dealing with the 
>>> remaining state that have "little general applicability as the 
>>> requirement for objects to force themselves into" the disordered 
>>> arrays of the liquid state "is an absurd limitation." (However, I'd 
>>> support funding it nevertheless.)
>>>
>>> Best regards, Navdeep
>>>
>>>
>>> --- On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 10:14:04AM +0100, Peter Artymiuk
>>> wrote:
>>>> Another of my colleagues, Jeremy Craven, is an NMR spectroscopist 
>>>> and
>> bioinformatician. He is in referee mode at present and comments:
>>>>
>>>>> From: Jeremy Craven <c.j.cra...@sheffield.ac.uk> Date: 19 April 
>>>>> 2013 10:05:18 GMT+01:00 To: Peter Artymiuk 
>>>>> <p.artym...@sheffield.ac.uk> Subject: Re: Fwd: popular piece on 
>>>>> X-ray crystallography
>>>>>
>>>>> I suspect this technique will have little general applicability as 
>>>>> the
>> requirement for objects to force themselves into ordered arrays is an 
>> absurd limitation. I would not support funding it.
>>>>> Jeremy
>>>>
>>>> I fear he may be right
>>>>
>>>> best wishes Pet
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 19 Apr 2013, at 09:53, David Briggs wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Following on from that - readers may be interested in Stephen
>>>>>   Curry's post in the Guardian, regarding the Crystallography 
>>>>> exhibit at the London Science Museum.
>>>>>
>>>>> http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/occams-corner/2013/apr/19/1
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
> regards,
>>>>> Dave
>>>>>
>>>>> ============================ David C. Briggs PhD 
>>>>> http://about.me/david_briggs
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 19 April 2013 09:44, Peter Artymiuk 
>>>>> <p.artym...@sheffield.ac.uk>
>> wrote:
>>>>>> Dear all
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In Britain there is a free newspaper that you can pick up on 
>>>>>> buses
>> called the Metro. My colleague Geoff Ford pointed out this short 
>> feature on the history X-ray crystallography in last Monday's Metro 
>> newspaper. I think it's rather good.
>>>>>> http://www.cosmonline.co.uk/blog/2013/04/14/conquering-realm-invi
>>>>>> si
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
> ble
>>>>>> best wishes Pete
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Prof Peter Artymiuk Krebs Institute Department of Molecular 
>>>>>> Biology & Biotechnology University of Sheffield Sheffield
>>>>>> S10 2TN ENGLAND
>>>
>>> --- Navdeep Sidhu Departments of Structural Chemistry & Pediatrics 
>>> II University of Goettingen Office Address: Institute of Inorganic 
>>> Chemistry Tammannstrasse 4 37077 Goettingen Germany
>>> Email: nsi...@shelx.uni-ac.gwdg.de Phone: +49 551 39 33059 Fax:
>>> +49 551 39 22582 Dept. Homepage: http://shelx.uni-ac.gwdg.de/
>>> ---
>> Prof Peter Artymiuk Krebs Institute Department of Molecular Biology & 
>> Biotechnology University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN ENGLAND
>>
> - --
> - --
> Dr Tim Gruene
> Institut fuer anorganische Chemie
> Tammannstr. 4
> D-37077 Goettingen
>
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