Crystallography courses on the web
- X-ray Crystallography in 5401 seconds (Manfred S. Weiss): http://www.embl-hamburg.de/~msweiss/teach (A very short and simple introduction)
- The book of Fourier (Kevin Cowtan): http://www.ysbl.york.ac.uk/~cowtan/fourier/fourier.html (Nice explanation of what is important in a Fourier calculation)
- The physical meaning of the phase in crystallography (Stanley C. Nyburg): http://www.ccp14.ac.uk/maths/nyburg/ (A Classic in Crystallographic Teaching)
- Crystallography 101 (Bernhard Rupp): http://ruppweb.dyndns.org/Xray/101index.html (Very good and nice introduction, some interactive parts)
- Crystallographic Tutorials (Michael R. Sawaya): http://www.doe-mbi.ucla.edu/%7Esawaya/tutorials/tutorials.html (good for beginners, somewhat outdated when it comes to programs)
- Basic Maths for Protein Crystallographers (Eleanor Dodson): http://www.ysbl.york.ac.uk/~mgwt/CCP4/EJD/bmg/index.html (If you want to work in protein crystallography, here are the math essentials)
- The Molecular Level - Tools for Structural Biology Education and Training (Gale Rhodes): http://www.usm.maine.edu/~rhodes/ (from the author of "Crystallography Made Crystal Clear" - website includes a Glossary of Terms from Crystallography, NMR, and Homology Modeling)
- Macromolecular Crystallography course at Cambridge Institute of Medical Research - 6 basic lectures (available as HTML) and 17 advanced topics (10 of which are available as HTML)
Movies
- Crystallographic movies (James Holton): http://ucxray.berkeley.edu/~jamesh/movies (Very illustrative movies on the effects of resolution, R-factor data completeness etc. on the information content of the structure).
- http://www.ruppweb.org/level1/movies_list.htm
- 17 minutes about structural biology
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- http://videolectures.net/mit3091f04_sadoway_lec14/ physics up to Boltzmann distribution
- ...
- http://videolectures.net/mit3091f04_sadoway_lec19/
- http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Materials-Science-and-Engineering/3-60Fall-2005/CourseHome/ The instructor is Prof. Bernhardt Wuensch (materials science).