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I am about to embark on doing a PhD which involves using NMR to elucidate protein structure, but my maths and physics are relatively weak. So what should I do and to what extent must I improve myself in both subjects in order to understand protein NMR.

2007-02-26 21:14:36 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Biology

3 answers

Just take a peek on applied maths and physics, only related to NMR.

If you are really interested in NMR, you wont find troubling in understanding the concepts. Moreover, in PhD, you might need to encounter new problems and for finding solutions, you require these basic understandings.

Not that you need to be an expert in it. Just by understanding which switch makes which bulb glow (the relationship between concepts), will make you make more confident in the subject you are pursuing.

By the way! All the very best!

2007-02-26 21:59:09 · answer #1 · answered by Tiger Tracks 6 · 0 0

i'm not sure of the practicle information of uising Nuclear magnetic resonance accordingly yet you should apply it in theory. so a ways as i can bear in mind NMR is suited to earnings something in answer. the different option is X-ray crystallography which may well be used to earnings the three-D shape of the protien.

2016-11-26 01:39:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

yes, you should have some informations about it.

you should do ur research, and every time u couldnt solve some thing about physic and mathematics, ask from student of physics or mathematics to help u to solve it.

most of the time they answer u.

2007-02-26 21:57:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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