Saddle-node bifurcation: Difference between revisions

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en>Daddi Moussa Ider Abdallah
A video has been aded to illstrate the saddle node bifurcation
en>V madhu
m Found a typo in the marginal stability condition. The partial has to be with respect to x, and not r.
 
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[[File:Vonlaue.png|thumb|300px|Ray diagram of Von Laue formulation]]
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In [[physics]], a '''Bragg plane''' is a [[Plane (geometry)|plane]] in [[reciprocal space]] which bisects one reciprocal lattice vector <math>\mathbf{K}</math>.<ref>{{Cite book
  | last1 = Ashcroft | first1 = Neil W.
  | last2 = Mermin | first2 = David
  | title = Solid State Physics
  | publisher = Brooks Cole
  | edition = 1
  | date = January 2, 1976
  | pages = 96–100
  | isbn = 0-03-083993-9}}</ref> It is relevant to define this plane as part of the definition of the Von Laue condition for [[Interference (wave propagation)|diffraction peaks]] in [[X-ray_crystallography|x-ray diffraction crystallography]].
 
Considering the diagram at right, the arriving [[x-ray]] [[plane wave]] is defined by:
 
:<math>e^{i\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{r}}=\cos {(\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{r})} +i\sin {(\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{r})}</math>
 
Where <math>\mathbf{k}</math> is the incident wave vector given by:
 
:<math>\mathbf{k}=\frac{2\pi}{\lambda}\hat n</math>
 
where <math>\lambda</math> is the [[wavelength]] of the incident [[photon]]. While the [[Bragg's law|Bragg formulation]] assumes a unique choice of direct lattice planes and [[specular reflection]] of the incident X-rays, the Von Laue formula only assumes monochromatic light and that each scattering center acts as a source of secondary wavelets as described by the [[Huygens principle]]. Each scattered wave contributes to a new plane wave given by:
 
:<math>\mathbf{k^\prime}=\frac{2\pi}{\lambda}\hat n^\prime</math>
 
The condition for constructive interference in the <math>\hat n^\prime</math> direction is that the path difference between the photons is an integer multiple (m) of their wavelength. We know then that for constructive interference we have:
 
:<math>|\mathbf{d}|\cos{\theta}+|\mathbf{d}|\cos{\theta^\prime}=\mathbf{d}\cdot(\hat n-\hat n^\prime)=m\lambda</math>
 
where <math>m\in\mathbb{Z}</math>. Multiplying the above by <math>2\pi/\lambda</math> we formulate the condition in terms of the wave vectors <math>\mathbf{k}</math> and <math>\mathbf{k^\prime}</math>:
 
:<math>\mathbf{d}\cdot(\mathbf{k}-\mathbf{k^\prime})=2\pi m</math>
 
[[File:Bragg plane_illustration.png|thumb|300px|The Bragg plane in blue, with its associated reciprocal lattice vector K.]]
 
Now consider that a crystal is an array of scattering centres, each at a point in the [[Bravais lattice]]. We can set one of the scattering centres as the origin of an array. Since the lattice points are displaced by the Bravais lattice vectors <math>\mathbf{R}</math>, scattered waves interfere constructively when the above condition holds simultaneously for all values of <math>\mathbf{R}</math> which are Bravais lattice vectors, the condition then becomes:
 
:<math>\mathbf{R}\cdot(\mathbf{k}-\mathbf{k^\prime})=2\pi m</math>
 
An equivalent statement (see [[Reciprocal_lattice#Mathematical_description|mathematical description of the reciprocal lattice]]) is to say that:
 
:<math>e^{i(\mathbf{k}-\mathbf{k^\prime})\cdot\mathbf{R}}=1</math>
 
By comparing this equation with the definition of a reciprocal lattice vector, we see that constructive interference occurs if <math>\mathbf{K}=\mathbf{k}-\mathbf{k^\prime}</math> is a vector of the reciprocal lattice. We notice that <math>\mathbf{k}</math> and <math>\mathbf{k^\prime}</math> have the same magnitude, we can restate the Von Laue formulation as requiring that the tip of incident wave vector <math>\mathbf{k}</math> must lie in the plane that is a perpendicular bisector of the reciprocal lattice vector <math>\mathbf{K}</math>. This reciprocal space plane is the ''Bragg plane''.
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==See also==
* [[X-ray crystallography]]
* [[Reciprocal lattice]]
* [[Bravais lattice]]
* [[Powder diffraction]]
* [[Kikuchi line]]
* [[Brillouin zone]]
 
 
[[Category:Crystallography]]
[[Category:Geometry]]
[[Category:Fourier analysis]]
[[Category:Lattice points]]
[[Category:Diffraction]]

Latest revision as of 18:02, 3 October 2014

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