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"Thickness Effect" in Absorption Spectra near Absorption Edges
150
Citations
5
References
1957
Year
X-ray SpectroscopyEngineeringAbsorption SpectroscopyTwo-crystal X-ray SpectrometersX-ray FluorescenceX-ray ImagingOptical PropertiesX-ray TechnologyInstrumentationReflectanceRadiologyHealth SciencesPhysicsObserved Absorption SpectrumSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsAtomic AbsorptionLight AbsorptionX-ray OpticThickness Effect
The details of an observed absorption spectrum are shown to depend upon the thickness of the absorber. This effect is present, at least in principle, regardless of the type of radiation involved. It is discussed here specifically for x-rays, and specifically for the neighborhood of an absorption edge. Measurements of widths and of relative intensities of the component structure are the most sensitively involved, but wavelengths are also slightly affected. The explanation lies in the r\^ole of the effective spectral window of the spectrometer. The effect may be serious when the "tails" of the window are extensive, as is inevitably the case with two-crystal x-ray spectrometers. Features of the extent and shape of the spectral window for the (1, +1) position of the instrument used in this work are roughly determined from the thickness effect.
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