You usually detect twinning most reliably from the intensity statistics -
CCP4I2 and Xtriage report those..
Eleanor

On Tue, 16 Mar 2021 at 07:31, Marina Gárdonyi <
marina....@pharmazie.uni-marburg.de> wrote:

> Dear all,
>
> thanks to all who helped me solving the question. You sent me a lot of
> comments and information I have not taken into account.
> After reading all the answers, I have come to the conclusion that the
> spots that are very close to each other come from the long cell axis
> (57-57-160) and that twinning can probably not be seen in my case. I
> should have mentioned that the diffraction images came from an
> in-house x-ray machine, recorded with a 0.5 degree rotation range.
>
> Thank you all again!
>
> Kind regards,
> Marina
>
> --
> Marina Gárdonyi
>
> PhD Student, Research Group Professor Dr. Klebe
>
> Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry
>
> Philipps-University Marburg
>
> Marbacher Weg 6, 35032 Marburg, Germany
>
> Phone: +49 6421 28 21392
>
> E-Mail: marina....@pharmazie.uni-marburg.de
>
> http://www.agklebe.de/
>
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