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RESEARCH PRODUCT
IN13 Backscattering Spectrometer at ILL: Looking for Motions in Biological Macromolecules and Organisms
Emmanuel FarhiYuri GerelliCorinne RivasseauFabio SonvicoJudith PetersPaolo MarianiM.t. Di BariGiorgio SchiròNatali FrancescaChiara ChiapponiAlessandro PaciaroniAntonio DeriuStefano BarbieriDaniela RussoAntonio Cupanesubject
PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsSpectrometerbusiness.industryneutron scattering02 engineering and technologytechnique010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesAtomic and Molecular Physics and Optics0104 chemical sciencesspectrometryOpticsinstrumentbiological physics[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det]0210 nano-technologybusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSdescription
In 1998, three partner groups (the French institutions Institut de Biologie Structurale and the Leon Brillouin Laboratory and the Italian Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia, now merged with the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, INFM-CNR) applied to operate the thermal backscattering spectrometer IN13, at the Institut Laue Langevin, as a French-Italian Collaborative Research Group (CRG). The plan was to have access to a dedicated spectrometer in order to explore how far neutron scattering could contribute to the understanding of dynamics in biological macromolecules: how “flexible” must be a biological object to perform its function?
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-11-06 |