Hi Ke Yes, if you change the position of your E0 in Athena, it will result in a shift in your fit parameters. However, don't simply shift your E0 just to avoid the warning. Take a look to see if Athena mispositioned it first but if you are confident that it is correct, then you might take a look to see if E0 is large because you are not using a good model to fit the data. E0 is highly correlated with the path lengths so if you are way off in the latter, it can have an effect on E0. carlo On Tue, 14 Oct 2014, Ke Yuan wrote:
Hello Feff community,
I am practicing on using Artemis to fit a UO2 XAFS data I measured. The parameters I used can be found from the pic attached. The Artemis project file is also attached.
I have been getting this "e0 greater than 10" warning on many of my fittings. Will picking a slightly different E0 change the result much? Any suggestions on how to improve this fitting?
Thanks! Ke
-- Carlo U. Segre -- Duchossois Leadership Professor of Physics Director, Center for Synchrotron Radiation Research and Instrumentation Illinois Institute of Technology Voice: 312.567.3498 Fax: 312.567.3494 segre@iit.edu http://phys.iit.edu/~segre segre@debian.org