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Science 15 October 1976:
Vol. 194. no. 4262, pp. 324 - 326
DOI: 10.1126/science.968484

Articles

Science, Vol 194, Issue 4262, 324-326
Copyright © 1976 by American Association for the Advancement of Science


articles

Bounds on "bound water": transverse nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation in barnacle muscle

KR Foster, HA Resing, and AN Garroway

Relatively mobile protons that do not exchange with D2O exist in barnacle muscle cells. These are not part of the nonfreezing "bound water" that does exchange. Ninety-seven percent of the muscle water exhibits a single transverse relaxation time of 35 milliseconds: one water molecule per thousand, which is briefly and irrotationally bound, will produce the observed relaxation properties.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Nuclear magnetic resonance technology for medical studies.
T. Budinger and P. Lauterbur (1984)
Science 226, 288-298
   Abstract »    PDF »
"Bound water" in barnacle muscle as indicated in nuclear magnetic resonance studies.
D. Chang and D. Woessner (1977)
Science 198, 1180-1182
   PDF »
"Bound Water" in Barnacle Muscle as Indicated in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Studies.
H. A. RESING, K. R. FOSTER, and A. N. GARROWAY (1977)
Science 198, 1181-1182
   PDF »



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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)