Hi Matt,

What I want is the density 'inside' each atom in the map, so that I can make
> quantitative comparisons of "how much stuff" is present in a blob (modeled
> or not).
>

that's still ambiguous...: 1) do you want a density value calculated at a
point, which may be, for example, a center for an atom, or/and 2) you want
an array of points corresponding to the density values inside of a sphere
surrounding an atom of radius R (define R then - that's will be my next
question)?



> Are the per-residue "Fo" and "Fc" columns in the output of
>>> phenix.real_space_correlation actually what I am looking for?
>>
>>
>>  I'm not sure what you mean... Could you please explain? If you want to
>> get electron density value (in sigma or e/A**3) computed at each atomic
>> center (or any specified point in space), then phenix.map_value_at_point
>> would do it.
>>
>
> Well the output of phenix.real_space_correlation has 'Fc' and 'Fo' columns
> like so:
>
> i_seq :   PDB_string      element   occ      b      CC   Fc   Fo  No.Points
> FLAG
>     0 : " N   SER C1002 "       N  1.00  28.79  0.9871   2.58   2.75   52
>     1 : " CA  SER C1002 "       C  1.00  29.56  0.9945   2.67   2.58   58
>     2 : " C   SER C1002 "       C  1.00  31.68  0.9966   3.28   3.22   56
>     3 : " O   SER C1002 "       O  1.00  28.79  0.9971   3.51   3.55   55
>     4 : " CB  SER C1002 "       C  1.00  36.38  0.9531   2.06   1.80   56
>

Ok, sound like you asked it to calculate the map CC given two maps, {Fc,
Phc} and {Fo, Phc}. The values reported in the above columns are the
eight-point interpolated density values of corresponding maps computed at
atomic centers of listed atoms.



> Does the 'Fc' column mean that 2.58 is the average  density in atom number
> 0 (based on F_calc)?
>

No, it is the eight-point interpolated density value of Fc map computed at
atomic center of atom number 0.


> If so is this in sigma?
>

Yes.


> or e/A**3?
>

No, but that's an option to request.



> Is this the average density in some sphere surrounding the atom
>


No, see above.



> (like SFALL/OVERLAPMAP)?
>

Hm.. I don't know , I've never used these programs. -:(


Perhaps these are exactly the numbers that I would obtain from
> phenix.map_value_at_point, in which case I've already got what I want.
>

I guess, we can get the numbers you want if we spend a few more iterations
of communicating (may be off-list at this point).

All the best!
Pavel.

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