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AbstractAbstract
[en] We show here that the temperature dependence of the amide I band of myoglobin shows evidence for a low-lying self-trapped state at 6.15 μm. We have conducted a careful set of picosecond pump-probe experiments providing results as a function of temperature and wavelength and show that this low-lying state has a 30 ps lifetime at 50 K, much longer than the relaxation time of the main amide I band at 50 K. Fits of the temperature dependence of thermal occupation of this state yield the result that it lies 280 K below the main amide I band. Since the gap energy of this state is approximately equal to room temperature, this self-trapped state can act as a transient store of vibrational energy at physiological temperatures in biomolecules and can help to direct the path of energy flow in a biomolecule under biological conditions
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Symposium on the nanophysics of life sciences; Copenhagen (Denmark); 21-22 Jun 2002; S0953-8984(03)55806-4; Available online at http://stacks.iop.org/0953-8984/15/S1693/c31803.pdf or at the Web site for the Journal of Physics. Condensed Matter (ISSN 1361-648X) http://www.iop.org/; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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