English

Kinematic Diffraction from a Mathematical Viewpoint

Mathematical Physics 2011-10-04 v1 Disordered Systems and Neural Networks math.MP

Abstract

Mathematical diffraction theory is concerned with the analysis of the diffraction image of a given structure and the corresponding inverse problem of structure determination. In recent years, the understanding of systems with continuous and mixed spectra has improved considerably. Simultaneously, their relevance has grown in practice as well. In this context, the phenomenon of homometry shows various unexpected new facets. This is particularly so for systems with stochastic components. After the introduction to the mathematical tools, we briefly discuss pure point spectra, based on the Poisson summation formula for lattice Dirac combs. This provides an elegant approach to the diffraction formulas of infinite crystals and quasicrystals. We continue by considering classic deterministic examples with singular or absolutely continuous diffraction spectra. In particular, we recall an isospectral family of structures with continuously varying entropy. We close with a summary of more recent results on the diffraction of dynamical systems of algebraic or stochastic origin.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1105.0095,
  title  = {Kinematic Diffraction from a Mathematical Viewpoint},
  author = {Michael Baake and Uwe Grimm},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1105.0095},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

30 pages, invited review

R2 v1 2026-06-21T18:00:50.977Z