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The Biology Project > Biomath > Trigonometric Functions > Applications > Bragg's Equation

Trigonometric Functions Applications

Bragg's Equation

A crystal is an array of atoms that forms atomic layers known as atomic planes. When an x-ray is passed through a crystal, the x-ray beam is diffracted according the crystal's atomic structure. Using a technique called x-ray crystallography, one can construct the three dimensional atomic structure based upon the diffraction pattern.

X-ray crystallography has been used to uncover the atomic structure of thousands of macromolecules ranging from vitamins to protein complexes. X-ray crystallography was a critical technique in many discoveries that were honored with the Nobel Prize. Perhaps the most famous structure revealed by x-ray crystallography is the double helical structure of DNA.

 

 

Photo credit: Jane M. Sawyer

 

The structure of a crystal can be experimentally determined by Bragg's equation,

nλ = 2dsinθ,

where λ is the wavelength of x-rays, d is the distance between atomic planes, θ is the angle of reflection (in degrees), and n is a positive integer.

Use Bragg's equation to answer the following questions:

Find the distance between atomic planes.

Find the amplitude of the trigonometric function defined by Bragg's equation.

Find the lower bound of the distance between atomic planes.

Describe how the graph of the function defined by Bragg's equation relates to the graph of a nontransformed sine function.

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The Biology Project > Biomath > Trigonometric Functions > Applications > Bragg's Equation


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February 2007
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