<d"/sig> should be above 0.80

There seems to be plenty of signal there with all values above 1.02.  We have 
solved structures with less multiplicity and lower <d"/sig>.

There is a different criteria of "signal" for when you know the positions of 
the anomalous substructure atoms and when you need to find the positions of the 
anomalous substructure atoms.

As for "no signal", I think I am on record that there is always an anomalous 
signal. :)  But can you detect it?

Jim

________________________________
From: CCP4 bulletin board [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] on behalf of Faisal Tarique 
[faisaltari...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, April 25, 2014 4:06 PM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: [ccp4bb] anomalous signal

Dear all

sorry about my previous mail where i forgot to mention that the data was 
collected on home source at Cuk alpha and at 1.54A.

written below is the log file of an anomalous data processed through SHELXC..my 
question is ..what is the strength of anomalous signal ?? as it is said "For 
zero signal <d'/sig> and <d"/sig> should be about 0.80". Then in the present 
case is there really a signal or can be assumed no signal..we are expecting one 
Ca atom bound to the protein at its active site..the redundancy of the data is 
11.6..with this signal strength can we assume Ca to be present there or 
whatever little anomalous if present is due to something else....or there is no 
signal at all ??...

Resl.   Inf - 8.0 - 6.0 - 5.0 - 4.0 - 3.8 - 3.6 - 3.4 - 3.2 - 3.0 - 2.8 - 2.60
 N(data)     375   493   580  1319   450   538   679   866  1081  1414  1709
 <I/sig>    58.8  38.6  32.6  38.3  27.7  27.2  21.9  18.4  12.6   9.5   6.1
 %Complete  94.7  99.0  99.3  99.5 100.0  99.6  99.7  99.8  99.6  99.6  90.9
 <d"/sig>   1.65  1.27  1.18  1.25  1.19  1.12  1.11  1.11  0.97  1.02  1.05

--
Regards

Faisal
School of Life Sciences
JNU

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