Now who's to say that's not just some 3d studio max artwork made by some scientist who's bullshitting you about what's really going on?werldhed wrote:Something like this? This is scanning-tunneling microscopy.
Anyone see that machine?
Maybe he is referring to the diffraction patters generated during X-ray cyrtallography. I got to work in a crystallography lab for a few months way back when. Interesting stuff, expensive machines. I remember the good old days of SGI workstations. But getting proteins to crystallize can be a real pain in the ass.
And werldheld tell me about Fourier transformations and crystallography.
And werldheld tell me about Fourier transformations and crystallography.
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Nightshade
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tnf wrote:Maybe he is referring to the diffraction patters generated during X-ray cyrtallography. I got to work in a crystallography lab for a few months way back when. Interesting stuff, expensive machines. I remember the good old days of SGI workstations. But getting proteins to crystallize can be a real pain in the ass.
And werldheld tell me about Fourier transformations and crystallography.
All I know about crystallography is basic stuff you learn in any chem class: you know, x-rays refracted off of molecules, using the pattern to determine molecule structure, Rosalind Franklin, Watson & Crick, etc. Kracus' description made me think of those patterns, too, which is why I mentioned it, but I think I've seen STM images that look more like what he was talking about.
I have no idea what Fourier transformations are -- never even heard of them.
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Nightshade
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I believe he's referring to Fourier transforms. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/FourierTransform.html
Basically you can use them to examine a signal and extract its frequency components.
Basically you can use them to examine a signal and extract its frequency components.
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Nightshade
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