Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1677871 | Ultramicroscopy | 2011 | 5 Pages |
The high intensity of free-electron X-ray light sources may enable structure determinations of viruses or even individual proteins without the encumbrance of first forming crystals. This note compares two schemes of non-crystalline diffraction data collection that have been proposed: serial single-shot data from individual particles, and averaged cross-correlation data from particle ensembles. The information content of these schemes is easily compared and we show that the single-shot approach, although experimentally more challenging, is always superior in this respect. In fact, for 3D structure determination a constraint counting argument shows that the cross-correlation scheme suffers from data deficiency.
Research Highlights►We compare two data collection schemes for imaging single particles with x-rays. ►Cross-correlation data suffers an information deficit relative to single-shot data. ►We recognize John Spence for his many contributions to single particle imaging.