Volume 3, Issue 1, May 2013, Pages 160–204
Nizam Uddin1
1 M. B. Khalsa College, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India
Original language: English
Copyright © 2013 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Inverse interpolation is the process of finding the values of the argument corresponding to a given value of the function when the latter is intermediate between two tabulated values. The finite differences are differences between the values of the function or the difference between the past differences. Finite differences are forward difference, backward difference and divide difference. Temperature, concentration of substrate, concentration of enzyme and other factors are affected the rate of enzymatic reaction. The concentration of substrate is the limiting factor, as the substrate concentration increases, the Enzyme reaction rate increases. Assuming a sufficient concentration of substrate is available, increasing Enzyme concentration will increase the rate of enzymatic reaction. Temperature, concentration of substrate and concentration of enzyme are increased the rate of enzymatic reaction at a limit which is called optimum limit. On the basis of this concept mathematical functions are defined. These mathematical functions are worked in "n" limit. Take the rate of enzymatic reaction is independent variable for finite differences, formulas and their estimation of errors. These formulas are used to obtaining intermediate values of Temperature, substrate concentration and enzyme concentration. If the point lies in the upper half then used forward difference interpolation. If the point lies in the lower half then used backward difference interpolation. When the interval is not equally spaced then used divide difference interpolation.
Author Keywords: Inverse interpolation, Finite differences, Estimation of Errors, Rate of enzymatic reaction.
Nizam Uddin1
1 M. B. Khalsa College, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India
Original language: English
Copyright © 2013 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Inverse interpolation is the process of finding the values of the argument corresponding to a given value of the function when the latter is intermediate between two tabulated values. The finite differences are differences between the values of the function or the difference between the past differences. Finite differences are forward difference, backward difference and divide difference. Temperature, concentration of substrate, concentration of enzyme and other factors are affected the rate of enzymatic reaction. The concentration of substrate is the limiting factor, as the substrate concentration increases, the Enzyme reaction rate increases. Assuming a sufficient concentration of substrate is available, increasing Enzyme concentration will increase the rate of enzymatic reaction. Temperature, concentration of substrate and concentration of enzyme are increased the rate of enzymatic reaction at a limit which is called optimum limit. On the basis of this concept mathematical functions are defined. These mathematical functions are worked in "n" limit. Take the rate of enzymatic reaction is independent variable for finite differences, formulas and their estimation of errors. These formulas are used to obtaining intermediate values of Temperature, substrate concentration and enzyme concentration. If the point lies in the upper half then used forward difference interpolation. If the point lies in the lower half then used backward difference interpolation. When the interval is not equally spaced then used divide difference interpolation.
Author Keywords: Inverse interpolation, Finite differences, Estimation of Errors, Rate of enzymatic reaction.
How to Cite this Article
Nizam Uddin, “Inverse Interpolation: The Rate of Enzymatic Reaction based Finite differences, Formulas for obtaining intermediate values of Temperature, Substrate Concentration, Enzyme Concentration and their Estimation of Errors,” International Journal of Innovation and Applied Studies, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 160–204, May 2013.