ZEISS
Glossary
Glossary
aBSD
Annular Backscattered Electron Detector
AIC
Ampere Interrupting Capacity
Aperture
Mechanical limitation of an opening ori-
ented perpendicular to the optical axis,
which filters out electrons whose trajec-
tories (tracks) do not run close to the op-
tical axis.
AsB
Angle-selective Backscattered
aSTEM
Annular Scanning Transmission Electron
Microscopy
Astigmatism
Lens aberration that distorts the shape of
the electron beam, compensated by the
stigmator.
Backscattered electrons
High-energy electrons that are liberated
from the specimen surface when the
specimen is hit by the primary electron
beam.
Bakeout
Degassing of surfaces of a vacuum sys-
tem by heating during the pumping
process.
Beam booster
Anode and liner tube of the Gemini col-
umn are connected mechanically and
electrically forming the beam booster. A
booster voltage (UB, liner voltage) of
+8 kV is applied to the beam booster, so
that a high beam energy is maintained
throughout the entire column. The beam
booster technique has two main advan-
tages: It minimizes beam widening, that
may occur due to stochastic electron-
electron interactions. Consequently there
is almost no loss in beam brightness,
even at low acceleration voltages. Sec-
ondly, the beam booster technique en-
hances protection against external stray
fields.
BGPL
Beam Gas Path Length
BSD
Backscattered Electron Detector
BSE
Backscattered Electron
C2D
Cascade Current Detector
CAN
Controller Area Network
CCD
Charge-Coupled Device
CL
Cathodoluminescence
Condenser
Device that collects and focuses the elec-
tron beam onto the specimen.
D
Depth
DECT
Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommuni-
cations
Depth of field
Distance along the optical axis which an
object in the specimen can be moved
while remaining in focus.
EBIC
Electron Beam Induced Current
EBSD
Electron Backscatter Diffraction
EC
European Community
EDS
Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy
Instruction Manual ZEISS GeminiSEM series | en-US | Rev. 2 | 349500-8138-000Instruction Manual
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