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DOI: 10.1201/9781003336433-5
5
Detection and
Imaging Tools that Use
Nonoptical Waves
Radio and Microwaves, Gamma and X-Rays,
and Various High-Energy Particle Techniques
It must be admitted that science has its castes. The man whose chief apparatus is the differential
equation looks down upon one who uses a galvanometer, and he in turn upon those who putter
about with sticky and smelly things in test tubes.
—Gilbert Newton Lewis, The Anatomy of Science (1926)
General Idea: In this chapter, we explore many of the detection and sensing tools of biophysics,
which primarily use physical phenomena of high-energy particles or electromagnetic radiation
that does not involve visible or near-visible light. These include, in particular, several methods
that allow the structures of biological molecules to be determined.
5.1 INTRODUCTION
Modern biophysics has grown following exceptional advances in in vitro and ex vivo (i.e.,
experiments on tissues extracted from the native source) physical science techniques. At one
end, these encapsulate several of what are now standard characterization tools in a biochem
istry laboratory of biological samples. These methods typically focus on one, or sometimes
more than one, physical parameter, which can be quantified from a biological sample that
either has been extracted from the native source and isolated and purified in some way or
has involved a bottom-up combination of key components of a particular biological process,
which can then be investigated in a controlled test tube level environment. The quantification
of these relevant physical parameters can then be used as a metric for the type of biological
component present in a given sample, its purity, and its abundance.
Several of these in vitro and ex vivo techniques utilize detection methods that do not
primarily use visible, or near-visible, light. As we shall encounter in this chapter, there are
electromagnetic radiation probes that utilize radio waves and microwaves, such as nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) as well as related techniques of electron spin resonance (ESR)
and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and terahertz spectroscopy, while at the more
energetic end of the spectrum, there are several x-ray tools and also some gamma ray
methods. High-energy particle techniques are also very important, including various forms
of accelerated electron beams and also neutron probes and radioisotopes.
Many of these methods come into the category of structural biology tools. As was discussed
in Chapter 1, historical developments in structural biology methods have generated enor
mous insight into different areas of biology. Structural biology was one of the key drivers in
the formation of modern biophysics. Many expert-level textbooks are available, which are
dedicated to advanced methods of structural biology techniques, but here we discuss the core