(PhysOrg.com) — Knowing the structure of a molecule is an important part of understanding it, but quite often its even more important to know how the molecule moves — more specifically, the vibrational dynamics that drive and control its interactions with other molecules in chemical reactions. Thats particularly true of proteins, the enormously complex molecular structures found at the heart of important life processes such as cell signaling, ion transport, and other functions. But most of the available techniques for studying the vibrational properties of a protein run into some vexing limitations, especially when probing the lower frequencies at which the proteins actually do their job.
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Ringing the hemoglobin bell