Article abstract


Nature Physics 5, 64 - 67 (2009)
Published online: 9 November 2008 | doi:10.1038/nphys1129

Subject Categories: Optical physics | Nanotechnology | Techniques and instrumentation

Structure from fleeting illumination of faint spinning objects in flight

Russell Fung, Valentin Shneerson, Dilano K. Saldin & Abbas Ourmazd


Moves are afoot to illuminate particles in flight with powerful X-ray bursts, to determine the structure of single molecules, viruses and nanoparticles. This would circumvent important limitations of current techniques, including the need to condense molecules into pure crystals. Proposals to reconstruct the molecular structure from diffraction 'snapshots' of unknown orientation, however, require approx1,000 times more signal than available from next-generation sources. Using a new approach, we demonstrate the recovery of the structure of a weakly scattering macromolecule at the anticipated next-generation X-ray source intensities. Our work closes a critical gap in determining the structure of single molecules and nanoparticles by X-ray methods, and opens the way to reconstructing the structure of spinning, or randomly oriented objects at extremely low signal levels.

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  1. Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, 1900 E. Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53211, USA

Correspondence to: Abbas Ourmazd e-mail: ourmazd@uwm.edu



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