Polarization correction #248
wojdyr
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I'm putting here my notes about the formula for polarization correction for X-ray beam intensity. Let's start with
📖 Chapter 4 of Principles of Protein X-Ray Crystallography by Jan Drenth.
This section ends with such a formula:
For unpolarized beam$\tau=0$ and the last component vanishes.
Now let's check the two mentioned references.
📖 L. V. Azároff, Polarization Correction for Crystal-Monochromatized X-radiation, Acta Cryst. (1955) 8, 701-704.
So before this paper, the Lorentz-polarization correction didn't take into account the polarization of the incident beam. The formula that the author derived is longer than (1), containing also the angle of reflection on the monochromator planes (the polarization fraction is calculated, not specified).
📖 R. Kahn, R. Fourme, A. Gadet, J. Janin, C. Dumas and D. André, Macromolecular Crystallography with Synchrotron Radiation: Photographic Data Collection and Polarization Correction, J. Appl. Cryst. (1982) 15, 330-337.
This one is about synchrotron radiation. The beam is polarized before it hits the monochromator, so the Azaroff's formula can't be applied. The authors transformed that formula to (1). Except that (1) uses different symbols:
$\rho \rightarrow \phi \qquad \mathscr{I}' \rightarrow \tau$ that symbol with prime that Kahn et al used is \mathscr{I}
All seemed to be settled, but then I came across this:
📖 W. Kabsch, Evaluation of Single-Crystal X-ray Diffraction Data from a Position-Sensitive Detector, J. Appl. Cryst. (1988) 21, 916-924
It's not immediately clear if (1) and (2) are equivalent. For me, it wasn't even clear if (2) and (3) are equal.
❓ Are the expressions (2) and (3) equal?
The second addend in (2) is:
The first addend is more problematic. But if we express the sine as
we can use the vector triple product formula:
And since$\textbf{S}_0 \perp \textbf{n}$
therefore
We can see that both addends together give (3). So yes, (2) and (3) are equal.
❓ Is (2) equivalent to (1)?
Both papers use different symbols. From the definition,$\measuredangle (\textbf{S}, \textbf{S}_0) = 2 \theta$ .
But how$\measuredangle (\textbf{S}, \textbf{n})$ is related to $\phi$ ? Drawing the geometry with all the angles (not included here because it's not readable) I got, from three right-angled triangles, that
Probability$p$ is most likely
Now we can substitute these three variables in the Kabsch's formula:
and we end up with (1). They are equivalent.
In the end, I found a more recent paper from Wolfgang Kabsch that mentions polarization.
📖 W. Kabsch, Processing of X-ray snapshots from crystals in random orientations, Acta Cryst. (2014) D70, 2204
It has the same formula as in the 1988 paper, except that the angle that was previously given as$\angle (\textbf{S}, \textbf{n})$ , in this paper is
The author prefers this form because$\textbf{S}_0$ may change as a result of refinements during processing.
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