Proteins, chain molecules of amino acids, behave in ways which are similar to
each other yet quite distinct from standard compact polymers. We demonstrate
that the Flory theorem, derived for polymer melts, holds for compact protein
native state structures and is not incompatible with the existence of
structured building blocks such as α-helices and β-strands. We
present a discussion on how the notion of the thickness of a polymer chain,
besides being useful in describing a chain molecule in the continuum limit,
plays a vital role in interpolating between conventional polymer physics and
the phase of matter associated with protein structures.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure