I imagine that you have done a spin-polarized calculations. If so, you must sum the spin-up and spin-down contributions when you are doing the epsilon2 spectrum without SO.

Cheers

Xavier


Le 13/01/2017 à 19:06, Nacir GUECHI a écrit :
Dear Professor Peter Blaha and Wien2k users.
I calculated the optical properties of a compound without SO effect then I recalculated it with SO effect. I found that the intensity of peaks in the epsillon2 spectrum of the case with SO is practically double than that of the case without So. My query: is this normal ? which case we should take?
/******************************************************
*Nacir GUECHI*
/
/Dr. Physique de la matière solide./
/Enseignant-Chercheur à l'université du Dr. Yahia FARES de Médéa <http://www.univ-medea.dz/fr/>, Algeria (www.*univ-media*.dz)./ /Laboratoire d'études des surfaces et interfaces des matériaux solides (L.E.S.I.M.S), université Sétif1 (Algeria)/
/http://laboratoires.univ-setif.dz/L.E.S.I.M.S//


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