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Energetic electromagnetic radiation finds frequent uses in science
(e. g. , for expe riments in nuclear and elementary - particle
physics), in technology (for materials testing), and in medicine
(for medical X-rays). The most common method of genera ting such
radiation is via the process of "bremsstrahlung" (a German term
coined by A. Sommerfeld, meaning "braking radiation") in which a
beam of electrons is direc ted into matter (e. g. , a metal
target), losing energy during its collisions with the atoms and
releasing this energy in the form of emitted radiation. The
character of such radiation may be drastically changed by the use
of a tar get with periodic structure (most commonly, a crystal
target). The coherent waves emitted from individual crystal atoms
interfere with each other, monochromatizing and polarizing the
radiation and often increasing its intensity manifold, thereby
creating a powerful radiation source of high quality for purposes
of scientific and technical applications. This is true both for the
well - established "coherent bremsstrahlung" process in which the
interfering radiation is emitted while the electrons cross a
succession of crystal planes, as well as for the more recently
discovered process of "channeling radiation" (generating radiation
of even higher intensity, but lower energy) in which the radiation
is emitted while the electrons propagate along a crystal plane, or
a crystal axis, in an oscillatory fashion.
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