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Snow Crystals - http://www.its.caltech.edu/~atomic/snowcrystals/
Information about the physics of snow crystals and snowflakes as well as the history of early scientific observations and photographs, how to take photos, preserving snow crystals, and unusual snowflakes. |
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Structures of simple inorganic solids - http://www.chem.ox.ac.uk/icl/heyes/structure_of_solids/Strucsol.html
An overview of important crystal structures. |
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Crystallography and Minerals - http://web.wt.net/~daba/Mineral/crystall.html
Crystallography groups in mineralogy are composed of 32 classes of symmetry. To illustrate these symmetry elements, example crystalline forms for each symmetry class are represented by a JAVA applet. |
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Kevin Cowtan's Picture Book of Fourier Transforms - http://www.ysbl.york.ac.uk/~cowtan/fourier/fourier.html
For future crystallographers. |
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Interactive Tutorial about Diffraction - http://www.lks.physik.uni-erlangen.de/diffraction/
A pictorial guide to using these techniques especially for working out structural information, largely through the use of illustrative examples. |
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MSU Chemistry: Crystallography Service - http://www.chemistry.msu.edu/Facilities/Crystallography/crys_serv.shtml
Explains crystallography procedures and is primarily intended for internal users of their analysis facilities, as well as a reference for students carrying out the work. |
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Protein crystallography - http://proteincrystallography.org/
Guide to the Protein crystallography, from Protein crystallization to Structure refinement. |
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Xtal-protocols - http://www.xtal-protocols.de
Manual with information about (membrane) protein crystallization for X-ray crystallography. |
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Crystallization in Foods - http://www.chipsbooks.com/crysfood.htm
Contains the latest information on how and why crystals form in foods, and how this information can be used to control crystallization. General organization of Crystallization in Foods is set according to the steps that occur during crystallization. |
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Difference Patterson Tutorial - http://www.dartmouth.edu/~brenner/pr613.html
A step-by-step guide to solving these problems based on the use of an example. |