| Literature DB >> 26089752 |
Mark Könnecke1, Frederick A Akeroyd2, Herbert J Bernstein3, Aaron S Brewster4, Stuart I Campbell5, Björn Clausen6, Stephen Cottrell2, Jens Uwe Hoffmann7, Pete R Jemian8, David Männicke9, Raymond Osborn10, Peter F Peterson5, Tobias Richter11, Jiro Suzuki12, Benjamin Watts13, Eugen Wintersberger14, Joachim Wuttke15.
Abstract
NeXus is an effort by an international group of scientists to define a common data exchange and archival format for neutron, X-ray and muon experiments. NeXus is built on top of the scientific data format HDF5 and adds domain-specific rules for organizing data within HDF5 files, in addition to a dictionary of well defined domain-specific field names. The NeXus data format has two purposes. First, it defines a format that can serve as a container for all relevant data associated with a beamline. This is a very important use case. Second, it defines standards in the form of application definitions for the exchange of data between applications. NeXus provides structures for raw experimental data as well as for processed data.Entities:
Keywords: HDF5; NeXus data format; data archiving; data exchange; platform-independent
Year: 2015 PMID: 26089752 PMCID: PMC4453170 DOI: 10.1107/S1600576714027575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1An overview of the structure of a NeXus raw data file. Note that only a small part of this structure (the first NXentry group and the first NXdata group) is actually required. The other content is optional.
Figure 2An overview of the structure of a NeXus raw data file for an instrument with multiple methods.
Figure 3An overview of the structure of a NeXus processed data file.