Home Page   
Home PageE
Today is
Java Applets
BIOLOGY
CHEMISTRY
HIGH SCHOOL CHEMISTRY
BIOCHEMISTRY
MATHEMATICS
JUST MOLECULES
PHYSICS

 

 

 

 

 

Interactive Molecules


C14H14O3 Naproxen
 

Naproxen is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) commonly used for the reduction of moderate to severe pain, fever, inflammation and stiffness caused by conditions such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, gout, ankylosing spondylitis, injury (like fractures), menstrual cramps, tendinitis, bursitis, and the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. Naproxen and naproxen sodium are marketed under various trade names including: Aleve, Anaprox, Miranax, Naprogesic, Naprosyn, Naprelan, Synflex. . Read more about Naproxen


Naproxen 3D Molecular Structure using Jmol

To Rotate Molecule -->>
Left Click and Drag

To Zoom-->>
Left Click + hold Shift button and Drag

Jmol Menu --->>
Right-Click

To view Using Chime -- PDB Structure of Naproxen Molecule NOTE: YOU MUST HAVE CHIME INSTALLED

 More Interactive Java Applets
BIOLOGY -- Cells Alive, Pairing DNA bases, axon potential simulator, Virtual Frog Dissection, Human Gait Analysis...
JUST MOLECULES -- Applets of Molecules... Molecular and Atomic Orbitals ...
BIOCHEMISTRY -- Lennard-Jones Molecular Dynamics, Peptide synthesis animation, chime molecular modeling tutorials...
MATHEMATICS -- Pythagorean Theorem, Probability Theorem, Pascal'sTriangle, Integration Applet, Vectors, Virtual Abacus ...
EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE -- Sun, moon and earth, Azimuth and Elevation, Earth Interior, Impact Crater, Atomic Emission, Planetary Detection...
PHYSICS -- Mechanics, Levers, Pulleys, Inclined Planes, Pendulum, Light and Optics, Electricity and Magnetism...

Need a Browser or Plug-in to view Molecules

For Chime plug-in --->Chime Download from MDL

For additional pdb browsers see: Free 3D Molecular Modeling Software


More 3d Molecules
COMPLETE DATABASE OF 3D MOLECULES
WATER
ICE
METHANE
CARBON MONOXIDE
DIAMOND
FULLERENE
SALT
SOAP
DNA
---more 3D molecules

 

 


Questions or Comments?
Copyright © 1999 EdInformatics.com
All Rights Reserved.