[ccp4bb] How to see miller indeces onto images

2010-06-25 Thread Marco Kadowaki
Dear all,

Is there an image indexing program that assigns and shows the Miller
indices onto the image itself, or maybe can read the indexing matrix to
point these indeces onto the image for inspection? I tried to use LABELIT,
but it showed the integrated Bragg spots as circles without the indeces.
The aim is
look at particular reflections into the original film and to observe possible
intensity modulation. Anyone knows a tool that do it?

Thanks.

Marco Antonio Seiki Kadowaki
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Universidade Federal do ParanĂ¡
Curitiba-Pr - Brazil


Re: [ccp4bb] How to see miller indeces onto images

2010-06-25 Thread Andrew Leslie
Dear Marco,

   I'm not sure exactly what you want (for example do you want the
indices of ALL reflections to be shown or just individual ones)
but iMosflm (CCP4 package) may be able to do what you want.

After indexing the image, the predicted reflections will be displayed (as
boxes). If you hold down the Alt key, moving the mouse over a reflection
will display its indices. Alternatively, if you wish to find a particular
reflection, use the Tools drop down menu and select "Find HKL" (this is
the only option at present) and enter the indices. A cross will then be
drawn at the position of that reflection. If you want to follow a
reflection across several images, simply zoom the image so that the
reflection of interest is in the centre of the zoom box (and not many
reflections are shown). If another image is selected, the same (zoomed)
part of the image will be shown, so it is easy to find the same
reflection.

Best wishes,

Andrew


> Dear all,
>
> Is there an image indexing program that assigns and shows the Miller
> indices onto the image itself, or maybe can read the indexing matrix to
> point these indeces onto the image for inspection? I tried to use LABELIT,
> but it showed the integrated Bragg spots as circles without the indeces.
> The aim is
> look at particular reflections into the original film and to observe
> possible
> intensity modulation. Anyone knows a tool that do it?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Marco Antonio Seiki Kadowaki
> Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
> Universidade Federal do ParanĂ¡
> Curitiba-Pr - Brazil
>