Talk:Mössbauer effect
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Is there a reason someone removed the umlaut from Mössbauer? -- Matt Stoker
Umlauts are not Wikifiable. Meaning you can't put brackets around it and make it a link. Same goes for most special characters. --MemoryHole.com
You can make it display, just not actually link: [[Mossbauer Spectroscopy|Mössbauer Spectroscopy]] links to the first term and displays the second, like so: Mössbauer Spectroscopy. The linking is supposed to be resolved I think with .92, but I'm not sure. --KQ
Fine, but why not leave the umlauts in the unlinked text? -- Matt Stoker
- With MediaWiki 1.5 we don't have such a problem anymore (as I've understood), so I just was bold moved the page a moment ago. I hope it's fine. — Pt (T) 23:27, 30 December 2005 (UTC)
- Nice articles on Mossbauer effect and spectroscopy. Upon reading that the Mars Rover uses a Mossbauer spectrometer, I was curious how elements were identified. From my college days I vaguely remembered the basic physics. Your article is a clear, concise explanation - better than other Web pages I found using a Yahoo search. - A diagram, such as http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nuclear/mossb.html, could be helpful. - Who is the author? Are you a university professor? -- PWL, 1-23-04
The article says X-rays and gamma rays behave differently, with the former able to undergo resonant emission and absorption in gasses while the latter cannot, but the article on gamma rays says they're effectively the same thing. Can anyone clarify? Specific wavelengths would be nice ^_^ 192.171.162.101 09:38, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
- Note that it's not the rays which are behaving in a certain way. It's due to the properties of the gas/metal target. X- and gamma rays are both forms of electromagnetic radiation, and they do overlap somewhat, but generally speaking gamma rays have higher energy, which is why the effect happens only for gamma rays. I can't say I understand the Mossbauer effect enough to give you specific wavelengths, but I'll put it on my to-do list. You may want to check out what HyperPhysics has on this (the link in the comment above yours). - mako 02:45, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
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Could someone give it English subtitles?