Molecule
in sentence
222 examples of Molecule in a sentence
Well, this air is a really stable
molecule
that will literally be part of the air once it's released, for the next 300 to 400 years, before it's broken down.
Like air, climate change is simultaneously at the scale of the molecule, the breath and the planet.
A
molecule
is the smallest unit of any chemical compound.
If you are a pancreas or a kidney and you need a specialized chemical sensor that will allow you to keep track of a specific molecule, why reinvent the wheel?
DNA is the long, string-like
molecule
that winds up inside our cells.
The water
molecule
on the surface is constantly being pulled inwards by the
molecule
at the center.
Now by adding soap, what happens is the soap
molecule
reduces the surface tension of water, making it more elastic and easier to form bubbles.
For example, the design and analysis of molecules for drug development is a challenging problem today, and that's because exactly describing and calculating all of the quantum properties of all the atoms in the
molecule
is a computationally difficult task, even for our supercomputers.
But a quantum computer could do better, because it operates using the same quantum properties as the
molecule
it's trying to simulate.
This
molecule
plays many roles in our cells, but in the case of CRISPR, RNA binds to a special protein called Cas9.
And this is a little protein
molecule.
It is a very long, linear molecule, a coded version of how to make another copy of you.
And so when you're copying this DNA
molecule
to pass it on, it's a pretty tough job.
And Schrodinger said the essence was information present in our chromosomes, and it had to be present on a
molecule.
You know chromosomes, but this was a molecule, and somehow all the information was probably present in some digital form.
So there was something universal about the DNA
molecule.
It was pretty obvious that it provided the information to an RNA molecule, and then how do you go from RNA to protein?
And so DNA didn't become a useful molecule, and the lawyers didn't enter into the equation until 1973, 20 years later, when Boyer and Cohen in San Francisco and Stanford came up with their method of recombinant DNA, and Stanford patented it and made a lot of money.
You don't see a description of how, you know,
Molecule
A, you know, comes up and docks with this other
molecule.
When emitted, a positron collides with an electron from another
molecule
in its surroundings.
The energy used to power the contraction comes from a
molecule
called ATP.
Now, this is the skeleton of the
molecule.
You have a
molecule
coming in, it gets into the protein, which is schematic here, and it causes this thing to switch, to turn, to move in some way by binding in certain parts.
And the attraction, the forces, between the
molecule
and the protein cause the motion.
In fact, molecules are able to vibrate at a set of frequencies which are very specific for each
molecule
and for the bonds connecting them.
Now, after searching high and low for several months, I discovered that there was a type of
molecule
called a Borane which has exactly the same vibration.
And it is the classic synthetic aroma chemical, OK? It’s the
molecule
that has made men’s fragrances smell the way they do since 1881, to be exact.
And I said, first of all, let me do the calculation on that compound, bottom right, which is related to coumarin, but has an extra pentagon inserted into the
molecule.
There's hundreds of them in this
molecule.
For example, we can look at a DNA
molecule
model here.
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