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Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
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Default Goniometer designs, one kinematic, one elastic

Exactly.

There was a class of sorts - research - that did this over and over
with a half dozen 'items'. simple at first and then bearing down
hard on the math with the complex ones.

I think the last one was a protein or such - non-dirt type.

I was serving as the lab (all physics labs) tech. Lots of varying work.

The lab next to it - it being in a radiation lab - was a 'gun' we developed
on grant. That sucker gave me the willies.

Martin

Joseph Gwinn wrote:
In article ,
"Martin H. Eastburn" wrote:

Hum - used on with a Siemens High voltage, High current X-ray and our
home made Cross X-ray tube.

The tricky thing was the crystal was water absorbent. Had to have a bell over
it before and after measurement...


Never done it myself, but heard about it in the mid 1980s from a
girlfriend who worked in a bio lab where they were trying to crystallize
a large protein (don't recall which one) so they could deduce its atomic
structure.

Joe Gwinn


Martin

Joseph Gwinn wrote:
FYI. I came upon two interesting goniometer designs.

For the record, a goniometer is a kind of stage that rotates about a
center well outside of the goniometer body, and is used for such things
as rotating crystals whose x-ray diffraction patterns are being
measured, or for rotating an optical lens about its physical center (or
perhaps about one of its optical nodes) in pitch and yaw.


Kinematic: US Patent 6,705,019 to Mauro.

Figures 21 and 22 cover a variation that a HSM could make. Two
cylinders whose radii differ by the ball diameter, three or four balls,
and a carrier. Yes, four balls. Why it works kinematically is
described in the patent.


Elastic: 4,759,130 to Goldowsky.

This has to be the shortest modern patent I've read. Anyway, this is
buildable by a HSM, and allows one to adjust angle to 0.001 degree
resolution without the stage moving sideways.


Patents can be obtained in pdf from www.pat2pdf.org or Google Patents.


Joe Gwinn