Sentences with phrase «given molecule»

The necessary electromagnetic resonances arise from the presence in the compound of chromophores, which give the molecule a characteristic color.
In fields like metallurgy, defects are removed «by turning up the temperature to give molecules more freedom to move grain boundaries and voids,» she said.
Then he and his students gave the molecules a very basic task to perform: latching onto another molecule.
Sobel used these patterns to give each molecule in his database a single, simple score, like notches on a yardstick.
@Moab from the wiki page you linked: «Liquids that do not evaporate visibly at a given temperature in a given gas (e.g., cooking oil at room temperature) have molecules that do not tend to transfer energy to each other in a pattern sufficient to frequently give a molecule the heat energy necessary to turn into vapor.
Scientists believe that any given molecule can transform from ortho - into para - spin states and vice versa, a process known as nuclear spin conversion.
After coating the nanotube array in layers of polymer solution, the researchers demonstrated that the array could be primed to detect a given molecule, by treating it with antibodies that typically bind to prostate specific antigen (PSA).
«By doing this on a surface, you limit the reactivity but you have the advantage that you can actually look at a single molecule, give that molecule a name or number, and later look at what it turns into in the products,» he said.
DNA microarrays are silicon chips with many spots to which a given molecule may bind.
«It would combine the best of both worlds and give us a molecule that's more effective and hardy, and that ultimately may be very useful when it comes to fighting the flu,» adds the immunologist.
You can not see that if you just look at the 2 - D or 3 - D structure of a given molecule
On the basis of reactions published in the chemical literature and insights from organic chemists on the team, each rule tells the program what transformations are possible from any given molecule.
Recently, we reported a study aimed at understanding the fundamental molecular properties that are inherently important for a molecule's radiative efficiency (8), which directly impacts the global warming potential (GWP) for a given molecule (9).
Shouldn't we be concerned with the bands that are more readily absorbed, you know, that give the molecule the characterstics that make them green house gasses?
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