Hyperlinks = hydrogen bondsFuture tech News By Jools Whitehorn 4 hours ago | Tell us what you think [ 0 comments ]
Tweet Google is still in labsChemists at Washington State University have come up with a way to use Google's PageRank algorithm to more accurately model water molecule behaviour.
Chemistry professor Aurora Clark and her colleagues Barbara Logan Mooney and L. Rene Corrales have documented their findings in a paper called moleculaRnetworks, published in the Journal of Computational Chemistry.
PageRank is an algorithm that Google uses to determine a site's popularity based upon the number of links to it from other sites and how influential those linking pages are themselves.
Everybody needs good neighboursProfessor Clark's technique uses the same algorithm, but instead ranks water molecules by the number and strength of hydrogen bonds to neighbouring molecules.
At first that may not sound particularly important, but water is part of almost every biological reaction. A detailed understanding of water's behaviour could have an impact across a wide range of areas.
Better and safer drug design, as well as understanding protein misfolding (attributed to some degenerative diseases) are two such examples.
PageRank has already been used outside Google to analyse food chains and webs, on a quantum network and even to judge the importance of scientific journals themselves.
Via Extreme Tech, The Verge Tags: Google, PageRank, water, Aurora Clark, Washington State University, hydrogen bondsTweetreddit!StumbleuponComment on this article Tell us what you thinkYou need to Log in or register to post comments By submitting this form you agree to our Terms of Use and so are legally responsible for anything you submit. DO NOT submit anything which may violate the Terms of Use or another person's rights including copyrighted or offensive materials. Submit Explore News Future techCar techRoundup Related News Google Wallet fixes pre-paid card issueGoogle testing own personal communication deviceGoogle sees Android in your eyesGoogle and Microsoft combined can't beat AppleGoogle developing wireless home entertainment device? Related Reviews Google Earth 6Google TVGoogle Nexus S Google Search is brokenWill blocking content farms fix it?
NEWESTMOST READMOST COMMENTED TECH NEWS HEADLINESO2 accelerates UK NFC development10 things we wish Apple would reinventPhilips 7000 Series tops smart TV line-upThese pirate ships won't sinkSony finally waves goodbye to EricssonFormer Olympus chief arrestedWindows Phone Tango: what you need to knowMore TECH NEWS HEADLINES20 best mobile phones in the world todayBest TV 2012: what TV should you buy this year?Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 coming at MWC?How Sony is trying to save the worldTop 50 best free iPhone apps 201250 best free Android apps 2012Tim Cook hits back at Apple factory conditions TECH NEWS HEADLINESiPhone 5 rumours: what you need to know (137)iPad 3 rumours: what you need to know (30)Samsung unfazed by Apple iTV plans (13)Is Sony ditching Android for its own OS? (12)Apple goes after US Galaxy Nexus ban (10)Apple boss dampens Kindle Fire competition (9)Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 launched (7)Find a review
Get more from TechRadar iPhone 5 rumours: what you need to knowiPad 3 rumours: what you need to knowSamsung Galaxy S3: what you need to knowPS Vita20 best mobile phones in the world todayiPhone 4SSamsung Galaxy NexusNokia Lumia 800Amazon Kindle FireSamsung Galaxy NoteNikon V1HTC RadarNikon J1HTC SensationSamsung Galaxy AceiPad 2HTC Incredible S TechRadar PollDo you subscribe to a film streaming service?
YesNo, not enough contentNo, I love physical mediaNo, too expensiveWhat's film streaming? Vote Results Where am I?Technology NewsTech newsApple newsMobile phone newsTablet newsTV newsCamera newsPC component newsPC newsLaptop newsInternet newsGadget newsGaming newsHome cinema newsHi-fi newsTechnology ReviewsDigital camera reviewsCamcorder reviewsMobile phone reviewsMP3 and iPod reviewsNetworking reviewsPC reviewsPC component reviewsLaptop reviewsTablet reviewsTV reviewsBlu-ray reviewsHi-fi reviewsTechRadarAbout usContact usSitemapReport this pageAccessibilityMedia enquiriesTerms and conditionsPrivacy policyAdvertising enquiriesJobsMore from TechRadarRegister & email newsletterFacebookTwitterYouTubeRSS feedsForumsPhone dealsSell your old mobileTechRadar Network3D RadarTap! magazineMacFormat magazinePC Format magazinePC Plus magazineLinux Format magazineCopyright 2006 - 2011 Future Publishing Limited,
30 Monmouth Street, Bath, BA1 2BW, United Kingdom
England and Wales company registration number 2008885
0 comments:
Post a Comment