Physical Principles and Techniques of Protein Chemistry, Part 1 |
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Page 337
the optical axis , the light will be split into two components , one polarized parallel
and one polarized perpendicular to the electric field . The phase difference 8 , in
radians , between these two components , after traveling the length 1 through ...
the optical axis , the light will be split into two components , one polarized parallel
and one polarized perpendicular to the electric field . The phase difference 8 , in
radians , between these two components , after traveling the length 1 through ...
Page 384
Although the moving - boundary method is inherently limited as a means of
isolating purified components , it is often ... E , a single macromolecule interacting
reversibly and rapidly with an uncharged component of the buffer can give two ...
Although the moving - boundary method is inherently limited as a means of
isolating purified components , it is often ... E , a single macromolecule interacting
reversibly and rapidly with an uncharged component of the buffer can give two ...
Page 394
( 1947 ) have studied artificial two - component mixtures of albumin with other
serum proteins . ... of the deviation of apparent from real composition increases
as the difference between the mobilities of the two components decreases .
( 1947 ) have studied artificial two - component mixtures of albumin with other
serum proteins . ... of the deviation of apparent from real composition increases
as the difference between the mobilities of the two components decreases .
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Contents
The Enhancement of Contrast | 21 |
The Preservation of Specimens | 35 |
Examples of the Application of Electron Microscopy to the Study | 48 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
absorbance absorption acid appears applied atoms axis binding birefringence boundary buffer calculated cell charge Chem chromophores complex components concentration constant containing corrected corresponding curve dependence determined dielectric difference diffusion dipole direction distribution effect electric field electron electrophoresis elution emission energy equation equilibrium et al example excitation experimental experiments factor flow fluorescence fraction frequency function gel filtration given groups important increase indicate intensity interactions interpretation ionic strength ions light limited macromolecules measured method migration mixture mobility molecular molecules moving-boundary observed obtained occurs optical orientation particles patterns peaks perturbation phase plot polarization position possible present procedure produced protein ratio reaction reference relative relaxation respectively rotational separation serum albumin shown single solution solvent specific spectra spectrum structure studies technique theoretical theory tion unit usually values volume wavelength weight yield zone