Replies: 3 comments
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If we agree with Peter, then at the very least a warning in the docs that the calculator may not be appropriate for biological and some other soft matter systems might be in order? Kind of related to this is this piece of work: |
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Hummm... I need to think a bit about this but I am a bit confused at the moment of why we would use SLD in this case. SLD should only be used for groups of atoms I would think? such as amino acids or, as we used to do a lot in the old days, CH3 groups, CH2 groups etc where indeed we used tabulated values for those groups in similar materials. But, given we have a real space "atomic" structure from the PDB don't we have all the necessary information to do the calculation properly (modula solvent effects perhaps)? we have the atom types and their coordinates? Why would we be guessing at an effective atomic SLD? Of course I may not understand the PDB format (ok .. I know nothing really 😄 so maybe we don't have the coordinates? |
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Looking at this again, I think the user was confused by our poor nomenclature. I think this based on reviews I did of the code for the beta and Rg calculations added by @smalex-z to the generic scattering calculator where terms were labeled sld even though they were clearly b (in fm). the bs are available from |
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Biological User PeterH comments (the following is from several emails):
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