TY  - BOOK
AU  - Heger, Gernot
AU  - Richter, Dieter
AU  - Roth, Georg
AU  - Zorn, Reiner (Editors)
A3  - Brückel, Thomas
TI  - Neutron scattering: laboratory course: lectures: lectures of the JCNS laboratory course held at Forschungszentrum Jülich and the research reactor FRM II of TU Munich in cooperation with RWTH Aachen and University of Münster
VL  - 39
CY  - Jülich
PB  - Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH Zentralbibliothek, Verlag
M1  - PreJuSER-136390
SN  - 978-3-89336-789-4
T2  - Schriften des Forschungszentrums Jülich. Reihe Schlüsseltechnologien / key technologies
SP  - getr. Zählung
PY  - 2012
N1  - Record converted from JUWEL: 18.07.2013
AB  - Imagine you leave this lecture hall, some mean looking guys dressed entirely in black follow, kidnap and take you to the medieval castle of Nideggen in the close-by Eifel mountains. There you are being thrown into a pitch dark dungeon. You cannot see anything, but you hear some noises. Are there rats? Are there other prisoners? Are there dragons? Luckily you remember that you have some matches in your pocket. You light a match, you can see everything around you and everything becomes clear to you… What I have just described is essentially like a scattering experiment: figuratively it sheds light into darkness and helps us understand the world around us. Let’s analyse what you did in the dungeon: first when you light the match, you start a source of radiation. Here the radiation is light. This light then gets scattered (reflected, transmitted) from the surrounding objects. In a scientific scattering experiment, we will call this object a “sample”. Back to the dungeon: some of this radiation gets scattered into your eye. Your eye serves as very special radiation detector: with its lens, it is able to even make an image of the objects on the retina, which in the language of a physicist would be called an “area position sensitive pixel detector”. This image contains lots of information: the colour of the backscattered light tells you something about the absorption of certain components of the light and therefore gives information about the material the light is scattered from. The position of the signal on the retina gives you information about the spatial arrangement of the objects around you. And finally the time dependence of the signal tells you that the monster is actually crawling towards you, ready to attack. All this information has to be treated and interpreted. This is done by our brain, an extremely powerful computer to analyse this wealth of data....
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)3
UR  - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/136390
ER  -