Advanced Neutron Sources 1988, Proceedings of the 10th Meeting of the INT Collaboration on Advanced Neutron Sources (ICANS X), Held at Los Alamos, October 1988Revolving around the interaction between spectrometer and target-station design and performance, this volume emphasises the need for feedback that must exist between scientific requirements and source design. It achieves a forum for the sharing of information on the development of spallation neutron sources. Of great value to researchers in condensed matter physics, instrumentation and data processing involved in neutron scattering at pulsed and steady sources. |
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Results 1-3 of 95
Page 357
... angle scattering region . By doing so it would reduce even further the smallest Q attainable to approximately 0.05A ... scattering angles . Subsequently two further conditions were established : to be viable SANDALS would have to be very ...
... angle scattering region . By doing so it would reduce even further the smallest Q attainable to approximately 0.05A ... scattering angles . Subsequently two further conditions were established : to be viable SANDALS would have to be very ...
Page 360
... scattering angle for a given Q value . The fact that count rates vary for different scattering angles and different Q values in practice arises because the thermal and part of the spectrum eventually takes over at low neutron energies ...
... scattering angle for a given Q value . The fact that count rates vary for different scattering angles and different Q values in practice arises because the thermal and part of the spectrum eventually takes over at low neutron energies ...
Page 362
... angle region . As a further provision the sample tank will include windows for detectors at larger scattering angles up to 120 ° in the event that better resolution is needed in the future . An obvious problem that arises at small angles ...
... angle region . As a further provision the sample tank will include windows for detectors at larger scattering angles up to 120 ° in the event that better resolution is needed in the future . An obvious problem that arises at small angles ...
Contents
Monday October 3 1988 | 9 |
Tuesday October 4 1988 | 135 |
Wednesday October 5 1988 | 609 |
Copyright | |
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accelerator Advanced Neutron Sources analysis angular background beam line Brillouin scattering calculated chopper cold neutron cold source collimators count rate cross section crystal data acquisition deconvolution decoupled density detector deuterium diffraction diffractometer distribution dose effective energy transfer experimental experiments facility factor Figure fission flight path foil function gamma Gaussian geometry high-energy histogram improve increase inelastic injection instrument intensity IPNS ISIS LAMPF leakage liquid hydrogen Los Alamos magnetic material MaxEnt maximum measured methane module Monte Carlo neutron beam neutron flux neutron scattering Nucl Nuclear obtained operation optimization parameters peak performance Phys position present problems produced proton proton beam radiation radius range reactor reconstruction reflector resolution Rutherford Appleton Laboratory sample scattering angle shield shown in Fig shows solid methane spallation neutron source spallation source spectra spectrometer spectrum surface temperature thermal neutron thick time-of-flight tube wavelength width