Jmol/Cavities pockets and tunnels

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====Definitions====
====Definitions====
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*'''Cavities''' are open spaces within a macromolecule, large enough to contain a water molecule, or much larger. The term "cavity" is sometimes used to include pockets and tunnels, but in a stricter usage, it means a space with no openings ("mouths") to the outside surface of the molecule. Jmol's terminology for the stricter usage is "interior cavity".
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For definitions of the terms '''cavity, pocket, tunnel,''' and '''channel''' please see [[Cavity programs]].
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*'''Pockets''' are depressions (concavities) in the surface, or open spaces within the molecule having a single connection ("mouth") to the outside surface of the molecule. They are analogous to bowls and bottles.
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*'''Tunnels''' or '''channels''' are open spaces within the molecule that have two or more connections ("mouths") to the outside surface of the molecule.
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====Speed of Rendering====
====Speed of Rendering====
If you use the isosurface commands below, do so in the [[Jmol/Application|Jmol Java application]], not in JSmol in Proteopedia. Depending on the size of the molecule, cavity isosurface commands take about a minute to complete in the Java application, which is many times faster than JSmol. You would have to wait many minutes for completion in JSmol.
If you use the isosurface commands below, do so in the [[Jmol/Application|Jmol Java application]], not in JSmol in Proteopedia. Depending on the size of the molecule, cavity isosurface commands take about a minute to complete in the Java application, which is many times faster than JSmol. You would have to wait many minutes for completion in JSmol.

Revision as of 22:12, 21 December 2020

CAUTION: cavity counts and volumes, and scenes of cavities, are provisional. Some inconsistencies noted below in italics suggest that Jmol may have some "isosurface interior cavity" bugs. These are being investigated. Once they are resolved, this notice will be removed. User:Eric Martz, August 13, 2020.

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Eric Martz

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