Collagen structure. X-ray crystallography diffraction pattern obtained as part of research to determine the structure of the protein collagen, found i


Collagen structure. X-ray crystallography diffraction pattern obtained as part of research to determine the structure of the protein collagen, found in connective tissues. This image was produced by British physicist and molecular biologist Maurice Wilkins (1916-2004) while working at the MRC Biophysics Research Unit at King's College London, UK. It was here in the early 1950s that Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin, and other crystallographers obtained X-ray diffraction patterns for DNA that led to James Watson and Francis Crick's DNA double helix model. As well as DNA, the King's College researchers investigated other materials.


Size: 3780px × 4756px
Photo credit: © KING'S COLLEGE LONDON ARCHIVES/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: -, -ray, 1900s, 1950s, 20th, analysis, analytical, biochemical, biochemistry, biological, biology, biophysical, biophysics, black--white, century, chemistry, collagen, college, connective, crystallography, diffraction, historical, history, kcl, kings, london, machine, maurice, molecular, molecule, monochrome, pattern, physical, physics, protein, proteomics, structural, structure, tissue, wilkins, xray