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  2. Turkish Airlines Flight 6491 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_Airlines_Flight_6491

    The subsequent investigation found that the aircraft failed to acquire the correct instrument landing system's signal. Due to a series of errors from the pilots, the aircraft flew significantly higher than the proper altitude for approach. The autopilot then picked up a false glide slope signal.

  3. Glide path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glide_path

    Emission patterns of the localizer and glide slope signals Glide slope station for runway 09R at Hannover Airport in Germany. In aviation, instrument landing system glide path, commonly referred to as a glide path (G/P) or glide slope (G/S), is "a system of vertical guidance embodied in the instrument landing system which indicates the vertical deviation of the aircraft from its optimum path ...

  4. Instrument landing system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrument_landing_system

    In ILS, a more complex system of signals and antennas varies the modulation of two signals across the entire width of the beam pattern. The system relies on the use of sidebands, secondary frequencies that are created when two different signals are mixed. For instance, if one takes a radio frequency signal at 10 MHz and mixes that with an ...

  5. Instrument landing system localizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrument_landing_system...

    Localizer as component of an ILS (KMEZ runway 27, Mena, Arkansas) Emission patterns of the localizer and glide path signals. An instrument landing system localizer, or simply localizer (LOC, [1] or LLZ prior to 2007 [2]), is a system of horizontal guidance in the instrument landing system, which is used to guide aircraft along the axis of the runway.

  6. Signal peptide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_peptide

    A signal peptide (sometimes referred to as signal sequence, targeting signal, localization signal, localization sequence, transit peptide, leader sequence or leader peptide) is a short peptide (usually 16-30 amino acids long) [1] present at the N-terminus (or occasionally nonclassically at the C-terminus [2] or internally) of most newly synthesized proteins that are destined toward the ...

  7. Cell signaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_signaling

    Receptors may bind with some molecules (ligands) or may interact with physical agents like light, mechanical temperature, pressure, etc. Reception occurs when the target cell (any cell with a receptor protein specific to the signal molecule) detects a signal, usually in the form of a small, water-soluble molecule, via binding to a receptor ...

  8. Target peptide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Target_peptide

    The mitochondrial targeting signal also known as presequence is a 10-70 amino acid long peptide that directs a newly synthesized protein to the mitochondria. It is found at the N-terminus end consists of an alternating pattern of hydrophobic and positively charged amino acids to form what is called an amphipathic helix.

  9. Beta hairpin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_hairpin

    Beta hairpins were originally categorized solely by the number of amino acid residues in their loop sequences, such that they were named one-residue, two-residue, etc. [2] This system, however, is somewhat ambiguous as it does not take into account whether the residues that signal the end of the hairpin are singly or doubly hydrogen bonded to one another.