source: sasmodels/sasmodels/models/ellipsoid.py @ 431caae

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1# ellipsoid model
2# Note: model title and parameter table are inserted automatically
3r"""
4The form factor is normalized by the particle volume.
5
6Definition
7----------
8
9The output of the 2D scattering intensity function for oriented ellipsoids
10is given by (Feigin, 1987)
11
12.. math::
13
14    P(q,\alpha) = \frac{\text{scale}}{V} F^2(q,\alpha) + \text{background}
15
16where
17
18.. math::
19
20    F(q,\alpha) = \frac{3 \Delta \rho V (\sin[qr(R_p,R_e,\alpha)]
21                - \cos[qr(R_p,R_e,\alpha)])}
22                {[qr(R_p,R_e,\alpha)]^3}
23
24and
25
26.. math::
27
28    r(R_p,R_e,\alpha) = \left[ R_e^2 \sin^2 \alpha
29        + R_p^2 \cos^2 \alpha \right]^{1/2}
30
31
32$\alpha$ is the angle between the axis of the ellipsoid and $\vec q$,
33$V$ is the volume of the ellipsoid, $R_p$ is the polar radius along the
34rotational axis of the ellipsoid, $R_e$ is the equatorial radius perpendicular
35to the rotational axis of the ellipsoid and $\Delta \rho$ (contrast) is the
36scattering length density difference between the scatterer and the solvent.
37
38To provide easy access to the orientation of the ellipsoid, we define
39the rotation axis of the ellipsoid using two angles $\theta$ and $\phi$.
40These angles are defined in the
41:ref:`cylinder orientation figure <cylinder-orientation>`.
42For the ellipsoid, $\theta$ is the angle between the rotational axis
43and the $z$-axis.
44
45NB: The 2nd virial coefficient of the solid ellipsoid is calculated based
46on the $R_p$ and $R_e$ values, and used as the effective radius for
47$S(q)$ when $P(q) \cdot S(q)$ is applied.
48
49.. _ellipsoid-1d:
50
51.. figure:: img/ellipsoid_1d.jpg
52
53    The output of the 1D scattering intensity function for randomly oriented
54    ellipsoids given by the equation above.
55
56
57The $\theta$ and $\phi$ parameters are not used for the 1D output.
58
59.. _ellipsoid-geometry:
60
61.. figure:: img/ellipsoid_geometry.jpg
62
63    The angles for oriented ellipsoid.
64
65Validation
66----------
67
68Validation of our code was done by comparing the output of the 1D model
69to the output of the software provided by the NIST (Kline, 2006).
70:num:`Figure ellipsoid-comparison-1d` below shows a comparison of
71the 1D output of our model and the output of the NIST software.
72
73.. _ellipsoid-comparison-1d:
74
75.. figure:: img/ellipsoid_comparison_1d.jpg
76
77    Comparison of the SasView scattering intensity for an ellipsoid
78    with the output of the NIST SANS analysis software.  The parameters
79    were set to: *scale* = 1.0, *rpolar* = 20 |Ang|,
80    *requatorial* =400 |Ang|, *contrast* = 3e-6 |Ang^-2|,
81    and *background* = 0.01 |cm^-1|.
82
83Averaging over a distribution of orientation is done by evaluating the
84equation above. Since we have no other software to compare the
85implementation of the intensity for fully oriented ellipsoids, we can
86compare the result of averaging our 2D output using a uniform distribution
87$p(\theta,\phi) = 1.0$.  :num:`Figure #ellipsoid-comparison-2d`
88shows the result of such a cross-check.
89
90.. _ellipsoid-comparison-2d:
91
92.. figure:: img/ellipsoid_comparison_2d.jpg
93
94    Comparison of the intensity for uniformly distributed ellipsoids
95    calculated from our 2D model and the intensity from the NIST SANS
96    analysis software. The parameters used were: *scale* = 1.0,
97    *rpolar* = 20 |Ang|, *requatorial* = 400 |Ang|,
98    *contrast* = 3e-6 |Ang^-2|, and *background* = 0.0 |cm^-1|.
99
100The discrepancy above $q$ = 0.3 |cm^-1| is due to the way the form factors
101are calculated in the c-library provided by NIST. A numerical integration
102has to be performed to obtain $P(q)$ for randomly oriented particles.
103The NIST software performs that integration with a 76-point Gaussian
104quadrature rule, which will become imprecise at high $q$ where the amplitude
105varies quickly as a function of $q$. The SasView result shown has been
106obtained by summing over 501 equidistant points. Our result was found
107to be stable over the range of $q$ shown for a number of points higher
108than 500.
109
110References
111----------
112
113L A Feigin and D I Svergun.
114*Structure Analysis by Small-Angle X-Ray and Neutron Scattering*,
115Plenum Press, New York, 1987.
116"""
117
118from numpy import inf
119
120name = "ellipsoid"
121title = "Ellipsoid of revolution with uniform scattering length density."
122
123description = """\
124P(q.alpha)= scale*f(q)^2 + background, where f(q)= 3*(sld
125        - solvent_sld)*V*[sin(q*r(Rp,Re,alpha))
126        -q*r*cos(qr(Rp,Re,alpha))]
127        /[qr(Rp,Re,alpha)]^3"
128
129     r(Rp,Re,alpha)= [Re^(2)*(sin(alpha))^2
130        + Rp^(2)*(cos(alpha))^2]^(1/2)
131
132        sld: SLD of the ellipsoid
133        solvent_sld: SLD of the solvent
134        V: volume of the ellipsoid
135        Rp: polar radius of the ellipsoid
136        Re: equatorial radius of the ellipsoid
137"""
138category = "shape:ellipsoid"
139
140#             ["name", "units", default, [lower, upper], "type","description"],
141parameters = [["sld", "1e-6/Ang^2", 4, [-inf, inf], "",
142               "Ellipsoid scattering length density"],
143              ["solvent_sld", "1e-6/Ang^2", 1, [-inf, inf], "",
144               "Solvent scattering length density"],
145              ["rpolar", "Ang", 20, [0, inf], "volume",
146               "Polar radius"],
147              ["requatorial", "Ang", 400, [0, inf], "volume",
148               "Equatorial radius"],
149              ["theta", "degrees", 60, [-inf, inf], "orientation",
150               "In plane angle"],
151              ["phi", "degrees", 60, [-inf, inf], "orientation",
152               "Out of plane angle"],
153             ]
154
155source = ["lib/J1.c", "lib/sph_j1c.c", "lib/gauss76.c", "ellipsoid.c"]
156
157def ER(rpolar, requatorial):
158    import numpy as np
159
160    ee = np.empty_like(rpolar)
161    idx = rpolar > requatorial
162    ee[idx] = (rpolar[idx] ** 2 - requatorial[idx] ** 2) / rpolar[idx] ** 2
163    idx = rpolar < requatorial
164    ee[idx] = (requatorial[idx] ** 2 - rpolar[idx] ** 2) / requatorial[idx] ** 2
165    idx = rpolar == requatorial
166    ee[idx] = 2 * rpolar[idx]
167    valid = (rpolar * requatorial != 0)
168    bd = 1.0 - ee[valid]
169    e1 = np.sqrt(ee[valid])
170    b1 = 1.0 + np.arcsin(e1) / (e1 * np.sqrt(bd))
171    bL = (1.0 + e1) / (1.0 - e1)
172    b2 = 1.0 + bd / 2 / e1 * np.log(bL)
173    delta = 0.75 * b1 * b2
174
175    ddd = np.zeros_like(rpolar)
176    ddd[valid] = 2.0 * (delta + 1.0) * rpolar * requatorial ** 2
177    return 0.5 * ddd ** (1.0 / 3.0)
178
179
180demo = dict(scale=1, background=0,
181            sld=6, solvent_sld=1,
182            rpolar=50, requatorial=30,
183            theta=30, phi=15,
184            rpolar_pd=.2, rpolar_pd_n=15,
185            requatorial_pd=.2, requatorial_pd_n=15,
186            theta_pd=15, theta_pd_n=45,
187            phi_pd=15, phi_pd_n=1)
188oldname = 'EllipsoidModel'
189oldpars = dict(theta='axis_theta', phi='axis_phi',
190               sld='sldEll', solvent_sld='sldSolv',
191               rpolar='radius_a', requatorial='radius_b')
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