Paper
5 April 2004 Biomechanics and symmetry
Albrecht Ott
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Molecular motors are of nm scale they are the smallest motors known. They are quasi-omnipresent in the biological organism and among their most promiment functions are muscle contraction, flagellar motion, intracellular transport and cellular motion. In most cases the "fuel" for these motors is provided by the cleavage of a molecule named adenosinetri-phosphate (ATP) to its diphosphate (ADP). How this chemically stored energy is transformed into motion, although a subject of major research all over the world, is only partly understood. Motor function is a dynamical problem, and no technique today is capable of monitoring dynamics at nm scale. The energies involved are close to thermal, making a good signal to noise ratio difficult to achieve. Last not not least, a great deal of knowledge is needed to understand the multiple facets of this problem, ranging from biochemistry, nm technology to theoretical physics.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Albrecht Ott "Biomechanics and symmetry", Proc. SPIE 5400, Seventh International Workshop on Nondestructive Testing and Computer Simulations in Science and Engineering, (5 April 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.555384
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KEYWORDS
Proteins

Acquisition tracking and pointing

Head

Motion models

Cytoskeletons

Molecules

Modulation

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