Structural Dynamics  open-access icon

Journal Title

  • Structural Dynamics

ISSN

  • E 2329-7778

Publisher

  • AAPM - American Association of Physicists in Medicine

Listed on(Coverage)

JCR 2015-2019
SJR 2015-2019
CiteScore 2015-2019
SCIE 2015-2021
CC 2016-2021
SCOPUS 2017-2020
DOAJ 2017-2021

OA Info.

OA open-access icon

based on the information

  • 2017;2018;2019;2020;2021;
Keywords x-ray fel, synchrotrons, pulsed electrons sources, nuclear dynamics, diffraction
Review Process Peer review
Journal info. pages
Licences CC BY
Copyrights Yes
DOAJ Coverage
  • Added on Date : 2016-01-27T14:04:35Z
Subject(s) Science: Chemistry: Crystallography

Active

  • Active

    based on the information

    • SCOPUS:2020-10

Country

  • USA

Aime & Scopes

  • Aims and Objectives - Structural Dynamics Structural Dynamics focuses on the recent developments in experimental and theoretical methods and techniques that allow a visualization of the electronic and geometric structural changes in real time of chemical, biological, and condensed-matter systems. The community of scientists and engineers working on structural dynamics in such diverse systems often use similar instrumentation and methods. The journal welcomes articles dealing with fundamental problems of electronic and structural dynamics that are tackled by new methods, such as: /// Time-resolved X-ray and electron diffraction and scattering /// Coherent diffractive imaging /// Time-resolved X-ray spectroscopies (absorption, emission, resonant inelastic scattering, etc.) /// Time-resolved electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and electron microscopy /// Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopies (UPS, XPS, ARPES, etc.) /// Multidimensional spectroscopies in the infrared, the visible and the ultraviolet /// Nonlinear spectroscopies in the VUV, the soft and the hard X-ray domains /// Theory and computational methods and algorithms for the analysis and description of structural dynamics and their associated experimental signals These new methods are enabled by new instrumentation, such as: /// X-ray free electron lasers, which provide flux, coherence, and time resolution /// New sources of ultrashort electron pulses /// New sources of ultrashort vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) to hard X-ray pulses, such as high-harmonic generation (HHG) sources or plasma-based sources /// New sources of ultrashort infrared and terahertz (THz) radiation /// New detectors for X-rays and electrons /// New sample handling and delivery schemes /// New computational capabilities

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