two_lorentzian
This model calculates an empirical functional form for SAS data characterized by two Lorentzian-type functions.
Parameter | Description | Units | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
scale | Scale factor or Volume fraction | None | 1 |
background | Source background | cm-1 | 0.001 |
lorentz_scale_1 | First power law scale factor | None | 10 |
lorentz_length_1 | First Lorentzian screening length | Å | 100 |
lorentz_exp_1 | First exponent of power law | None | 3 |
lorentz_scale_2 | Second scale factor for broad Lorentzian peak | None | 1 |
lorentz_length_2 | Second Lorentzian screening length | Å | 10 |
lorentz_exp_2 | Second exponent of power law | None | 2 |
The returned value is scaled to units of cm-1 sr-1, absolute scale.
Definition
The scattering intensity \(I(q)\) is calculated as
\[I(q) = \frac{A}{1 +(Q\xi_1)^n} + \frac{C}{1 +(Q\xi_2)^m} + \text{B}\]
where \(A\) = Lorentzian scale factor #1, \(C\) = Lorentzian scale #2, \(\xi_1\) and \(\xi_2\) are the corresponding correlation lengths, and \(n\) and \(m\) are the respective power law exponents (set \(n = m = 2\) for Ornstein-Zernicke behaviour).
For 2D data the scattering intensity is calculated in the same way as 1D, where the \(q\) vector is defined as
\[q = \sqrt{q_x^2 + q_y^2}\]
Source
References
None.
Authorship and Verification
- Author: NIST IGOR/DANSE Date: pre 2010
- Last Modified by: Piotr rozyczko Date: January 29, 2016
- Last Reviewed by: Paul Butler Date: March 21, 2016