Unusual file formats in your daily document management and modifying operations can create instant confusion over how to edit them. You may need more than pre-installed computer software for effective and fast file modifying. If you want to revise date in XPS or make any other simple change in your file, choose a document editor that has the features for you to work with ease. To handle all of the formats, such as XPS, choosing an editor that actually works properly with all kinds of documents is your best option.
Try DocHub for effective file management, irrespective of your document’s format. It offers powerful online editing instruments that streamline your document management operations. You can easily create, edit, annotate, and share any file, as all you need to access these features is an internet connection and an active DocHub account. A single document tool is all you need. Don’t waste time switching between various applications for different documents.
Enjoy the efficiency of working with an instrument created specifically to streamline document processing. See how straightforward it is to revise any file, even when it is the first time you have dealt with its format. Sign up an account now and improve your whole working process.
hello friends welcome to the second part of the complete series on photoemission spectroscopy in the previous video we have seen the basic principles and instrumentation of xps if you have missed that video you can find the link for the first video in description box now lets talk about the spectra obtained from the xps instrument we have seen that the instrument gives a plot of kinetic energy versus the number of electrons counted so number of electrons counted is plotted in y-axis and kinetic energy is plotted in x-axis so now you can see that it starts from the lower kinetic energy in the left and goes to higher kinetic energy in right as normally a graph is plotted but in most of the modern instruments kinetic energy is converted to binding energy with the formula h nu is equals to binding energy plus kinetic energy plus phi therefore the lower kinetic energy becomes higher binding energy and higher kinetic energy becomes lower binding energy this means now x-axis starts from hig