Chemical Crystallography: Past, Present and Future
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Reference4 articles.
1. The interpretation of rotation photographs is enormously simplified by the use of the mathematical device of the Reciprocal Lattice, first introduced by Ewald; — from a paper on’ A Universal X-ray Photogoniometer Combining Apparatus for Single Rotation Photographs - Laue Photographs - X-ray Spectrometry - Powder Photogrpahs - Photographs of Crystal Aggregates, Metals, Materials, etc.,’ J. D. Bernal, Journal of Scientific Instruments, 4, 273–284 (1927).
2. Although the principle of the Weissenberg camera was described by K. Weissenberg in Zeits. für Physik. 23, 229–238 (1924), instruments were not manufactured commercially until much later.
3. The Beginning of the Union of Crystallography,’ P. P. Ewald, in Crystallography in North America, 1983, pp. 134–135, ACA, New York, NY.
4. Crystals and Nobels; G. A. Jeffrey, Physics Today 40, 9–10