What is X-Ray Crystallography? X-ray crystallography is a powerful analytical technique used to determine the atomic and molecular structure of crystalline materials. It involves directing a beam of X ...
For many decades, the method to obtain atomic-level descriptions of chemical compounds and materials—be it a drug, a catalyst, or a commodity chemical—has been X-ray crystallography. This method has a ...
Researchers from the University of Southampton have developed technology to help scientists observe proteins in motion. Understanding how proteins move will allow novel drugs to be designed. X-ray ...
Rice University researchers have systematically mapped out, atom by atom, the structure of the shell of the hepatitis E virus. Obviously, the knowledge of the morphology of this particularly nasty ...
Researchers from Okayama University have discovered rapid structural changes in the oxygen-evolving center of Photosystem II (PSII) upon light excitation, revealing insights into the mechanism of ...
Despite the recent substantial technological developments in X-ray crystallography, solving and refining structures at low resolutions remain substantial challenges. Many macromolecular crystals, ...
Researchers at the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory have been working on this problem for years; now, together with partners from Harvard University, they have perfected a new ...
X. 1. Symmetry groups, edited by N.F.M. Henry and K. Lonsdale.--v. 2. Mathematical tables, edited by J.S. Kasper and K. Lonsdale.--v. 3. Physical and chemical tables ...