RESUMO
The lateral resolution of a surface sensitive low-energy electron microscope (LEEM) has been improved below 4 nm for the first time. This breakthrough has only been possible by simultaneously correcting the unavoidable spherical and chromatic aberrations of the lens system. We present an experimental criterion to quantify the aberration correction and to optimize the electron optical system. The obtained lateral resolution of 2.6 nm in LEEM enables the first surface sensitive, electron microscopic observation of the herringbone reconstruction on the Au(111) surface.
RESUMO
Intensities of x-ray scattering from a series of fragmented rabbit muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) samples have been measured over the range x = 0.05 to s = 0.25. By varying the relative concentrations of lipid and protein (chiefly the Mg++-dependent, Ca++- stimulated ATPase) in the membranes of this series, and by employing methods of analysis appropriate to the scattering from binary liquid mixtures, we have identified the separable contributions of protein and lipid, and the protein-lipid interaction contributions to the total scattering profiles. The shape of the protein term is consistent with scattering from a cylindrical ATPase particle 142 A in length and 35 A in diameter. These data imply that the dominant ATPase species is monomeric. The protein-lipid interaction term has been analyzed by a novel treatment based on a determination of the pair correlation function between the electrons of the protein molecule with the electrons of the lipid bilayer in terms of the asymmetry of the transbilayer disposition of the protein. Applied to our results, the analysis indicates a fully asymmetric disposition of ATPase, in which one end of the molecule is contiguous with either the lumenal or cytoplasmic surface of the bilayer.