This concentration occurs through the absorption of water and small electrolytes, while retaining all the original organic molecules.
Chemists use their understanding of how molecules break apart to guess the structure of the original molecule.
Thus, for most molecules, sequencing commences with the second base of the original molecule.
Those two molecules then combine to form a copy of the original molecule.
The result is a structural isomer of the original molecule.
EI has few, if any, fragments having a mass that is near the mass of the original molecule.
You're not destroyed and re-created; your actual, original molecules are tunneled to a new location.
They are water structures which mimic the original molecules.
When enough interactions and annihilations have occurred, the density of the original molecule may be measured in that area.
The original molecule did not stack very well, Dr. Katz said.