WyattWilson
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2010
- Messages
- 1
Lend me your ears!
I have a graph from a drug development lab where I work. The graph plots the concentration of drugs (which a cancer killing drugs) versus cell viability (x vs. y). Basically, the higher the concentration the less viability (Cancer drugs kill cancer cells). My problem is this:
The X-axis is given in finite amounts of nanomoles (concentration unit): 2.6, 5.9, 400, 1000, etc. Then, given their concentration, the graph plots cell viability on the y-axis. BUT, we want the axis to be on a logarithmic scale starting at .1 going to 10,000. So, we want the x-axis to be on a more general, logarithmic scale, but when you place the cursor over a data point on the graph, it will refer specifically to one of the concentration units.
Help me please, or ask if I need to clarify more
I have a graph from a drug development lab where I work. The graph plots the concentration of drugs (which a cancer killing drugs) versus cell viability (x vs. y). Basically, the higher the concentration the less viability (Cancer drugs kill cancer cells). My problem is this:
The X-axis is given in finite amounts of nanomoles (concentration unit): 2.6, 5.9, 400, 1000, etc. Then, given their concentration, the graph plots cell viability on the y-axis. BUT, we want the axis to be on a logarithmic scale starting at .1 going to 10,000. So, we want the x-axis to be on a more general, logarithmic scale, but when you place the cursor over a data point on the graph, it will refer specifically to one of the concentration units.
Help me please, or ask if I need to clarify more