Difference between revisions of "Education"

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There is a vast amount of material available on the web that can be used for educational purposes. The following are some examples.
 
There is a vast amount of material available on the web that can be used for educational purposes. The following are some examples.
  
1. The education page of the BCA is under construction and already has some excellent links to educational material. There are some wonderful applets showing how diffraction works etc.
+
1. The education page of the BCA is under construction and already has some excellent links to educational material. For instance there are some wonderful applets showing how diffraction works etc.
 
[http://crystallography.org.uk/education-doorways]
 
[http://crystallography.org.uk/education-doorways]
  

Revision as of 09:19, 30 September 2011

Headline text

PCG Portfolio In the words of a recent British Prime Minister: Education Education Education!

There is a vast amount of material available on the web that can be used for educational purposes. The following are some examples.

1. The education page of the BCA is under construction and already has some excellent links to educational material. For instance there are some wonderful applets showing how diffraction works etc. [1]

2. The International Union Of Crystallography has a number of educational links, although some are now missing. [2]

3. I strongly recommend the following e-crystallography course. It covers a huge range of topics and has some excellent Java applets that can be downloaded. In particular see the applets for making an Escher type pattern, for diffraction geometry and the wonderful charge-flipping applet. In the last one you can draw a molecule or collection of atoms,calculate the diffraction pattern and then allow the charge flipping iteration work back from the intensity data to your original molecule. Magic! [3]

4. Another set of applets are given in the Interactive Structure Factor tutorial [4]

5. A Bragg's law applet [5]

6. Two computer programs that I have made available for free to simulate the motion of monatomic and diatomic chains. Note the comments I have made on the error that appears in almost all solid state physics books. [6]

7. A free computer program called VIBRATE! to compute the irreducible representations for vibrational modes. [7]

8. The Bilbao Crystallographic server is a must for anyone interested in learning about and making use of symmetry. [8]


--Glazer 16:26, 27 September 2011 (BST)