Backwards retina (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Friday, May 20, 2011, 00:53 (4725 days ago)

Atheists always point to the backwards retina. How can God be the great be the great designer when He has done something like that. Try on the latest complexities that make the retina what a great camera it really is. God is not such a dumb designer after all:-http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/46010

Backwards retina

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, May 21, 2011, 00:33 (4724 days ago) @ David Turell

Atheists always point to the backwards retina. How can God be the great be the great designer when He has done something like that. Try on the latest complexities that make the retina what a great camera it really is. God is not such a dumb designer after all:
> 
> http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/46010-I feel your appraisal is unintentionally misleading; the main objection from atheists is in asking the question "Why flip the image and then force the brain to flip it back?"-This article talks about a completely different point altogether. It's talking about an underlying mechanism that would be unaffected by transmitting the image the "right" way in the first place. Or, in another way, the mechanism discussed doesn't address the argument posited by atheists at all.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

Backwards retina

by David Turell @, Saturday, May 21, 2011, 01:50 (4724 days ago) @ xeno6696

I feel your appraisal is unintentionally misleading; the main objection from atheists is in asking the question "Why flip the image and then force the brain to flip it back?"-The experiement has been done that using lenses on a subject to make everything upside down, he soon has his brain flip things right side up. In pediatrics they teach that the newborn sees upside down and quickly learns the right way.
> 
> This article talks about a completely different point altogether. It's talking about an underlying mechanism that would be unaffected by transmitting the image the "right" way in the first place. Or, in another way, the mechanism discussed doesn't address the argument posited by atheists at all.-The article is only making the point that the retina is masterfully designed. It has to be backwards to increase energy delivery efficiency, and then these corrective measures are added.

Backwards retina

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Saturday, May 21, 2011, 05:05 (4723 days ago) @ David Turell

I feel your appraisal is unintentionally misleading; the main objection from atheists is in asking the question "Why flip the image and then force the brain to flip it back?"
> 
> The experiement has been done that using lenses on a subject to make everything upside down, he soon has his brain flip things right side up. In pediatrics they teach that the newborn sees upside down and quickly learns the right way.
> > 
> > This article talks about a completely different point altogether. It's talking about an underlying mechanism that would be unaffected by transmitting the image the "right" way in the first place. Or, in another way, the mechanism discussed doesn't address the argument posited by atheists at all.
> 
> The article is only making the point that the retina is masterfully designed. It has to be backwards to increase energy delivery efficiency, and then these corrective measures are added.-David, correct me.-I just reread the article, and not once did I see a reference that suggested that an image MUST be processed in reverse in order to achieve the desired effect...?

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

Backwards retina

by David Turell @, Monday, July 04, 2011, 21:34 (4679 days ago) @ xeno6696


> > The article is only making the point that the retina is masterfully designed. It has to be backwards to increase energy delivery efficiency, and then these corrective measures are added.-Here Cornelius Hunter, an avowed theist, describes how the retina goes from one photon to electric currents, via a force field. you may not agree with his point of view, but his sceintific description is excellent.-http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2011/06/vision-cascade-is-initiated-not-by.html

Backwards retina

by xeno6696 @, Sonoran Desert, Monday, July 04, 2011, 22:16 (4679 days ago) @ David Turell


> > > The article is only making the point that the retina is masterfully designed. It has to be backwards to increase energy delivery efficiency, and then these corrective measures are added.
> 
> Here Cornelius Hunter, an avowed theist, describes how the retina goes from one photon to electric currents, via a force field. you may not agree with his point of view, but his sceintific description is excellent.
> 
> http://darwins-god.blogspot.com/2011/06/vision-cascade-is-initiated-not-by.html-When dealing with the mutation rates you discuss in your book (independently verified) it definitely appears that the traditional "gradual" model doesn't work, hence Gould. -As for the link... he doesn't explain what exactly the problem is. -"The new research, however, found that when isomerization is disabled the vision cascade continues to function normally. It seems that a key step, occurring before isomerization, is a shift in the electron distribution of the chromophore. This shift modifies the electric field surrounding the molecule, and this in turn influences several amino acids of the opsin protein, which in turn leads to the activation of the transducin molecules."-So the system still functions even when you knock out a particular procesa... this isn't a big deal. Beta-lactase knockout experiments explained how a bacteria could create a lactase-like chemical in order to digest lactase under stress. -Aside from not explaining explicitly what the problem is, he's already arguing from a position of design... meaning that he argues from the outset that the molecule had to have all of these features designed in from the beginning. There isn't enough information here for me to agree with or deny his claim. He discusses the paper briefly, then just says "This is a problem for evolution, QED." But there's no arguments linking paper to evolution to QED.

--
\"Why is it, Master, that ascetics fight with ascetics?\"

\"It is, brahmin, because of attachment to views, adherence to views, fixation on views, addiction to views, obsession with views, holding firmly to views that ascetics fight with ascetics.\"

Backwards retina

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 05, 2011, 01:02 (4556 days ago) @ xeno6696

A paper that compares digital camera focusing to human eye focusing and finds that the eye is much better,but understanding the eye helps to suggest new appraoches for the camera.

And the retina is designed poorly according to the atheists:

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=giving-cameras-the-best-autofocus-p-20...

Backwards retina

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 05, 2011, 01:05 (4556 days ago) @ xeno6696

An article that compares digital camera focusing and human eye focusing. Studying the eye offers suggestions for camera software. The eye wins despite that terribly designed retina (according to atheists):

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=giving-cameras-the-best-autofocus-p-20...

Backwards retina:Muller cells guide light

by David Turell @, Thursday, August 14, 2014, 01:44 (3543 days ago) @ David Turell

Retinal special cells guide certain wave lengths of light to the right spots for proper vision:-http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140708/ncomms5319/full/ncomms5319.html

Backwards retina:Muller cells guide light

by David Turell @, Thursday, August 14, 2014, 15:42 (3542 days ago) @ David Turell

More information on Muller cells guidance of light. Note the illustration of the mechanism. By the weay, it was shown several years ago, and there is an entry I placed here that the blood supply in the front actually provides the best energy source.-http://phys.org/news/2014-07-fiber-optic-pipes-retina-simple.html

Backwards retina:new role for rods

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 19, 2014, 15:48 (3445 days ago) @ David Turell

New research continues to rebuff the atheist argument that a proper thinking God would never have designed such a weird retina:-"The scientists showed that in bright light, the rods mediate a so called surround inhibition. Surround inhibition is an important feature in the retina because it allows not only to transmit information about whether a photoreceptor is exposed to light, but also about contrast. While the cone cells hyperpolarize in bright light and thus send a visual signal to the inner retina, the rods depolarize, inversely matching the activity pattern of the cone cells. The response in the rods is driven by cone cells and mediated through horizontal cells. These horizontal cells connect rods and cones through their dendrites and long axons, and at the same time form a mesh of connections among each other. The hyperpolarization of one cone thus leads to the depolarization of many surrounding rods.-:During bright light conditions, the cells of the inner retina receive therefore information through two pathways: First through the well-established cone pathway, and second through this newly identified rod pathway. "We think that the surround information relayed to the inner retina through the rod pathway has different functional properties than the information obtained through the cone pathway," comments Roska. "In any case it is fascinating to see how the retina repurposes the rod cells during bright light conditions to increase contrast information, at times when they are not directly sensing light.'"-http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-11-function-rods-daylight.html

Backwards retina:Muller cells guide light

by David Turell @, Saturday, November 22, 2014, 01:01 (3443 days ago) @ David Turell

More on Muller cells guiding light:-http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/40996/title/Guiding-Light/-"The Müller cells' maximal light concentration occurred in the green-yellow part of the light spectrum at a wavelength of 560 nm, which happens to be the wavelength one cone cell type is most sensitive to. “The next question was, if they're guiding mainly green light, where are they directing it?” asks Labin.-"Zooming in on guinea pig retinas under a confocal microscope, the researchers found that each Müller cell was coupled to an individual cone photoreceptor, and that nearly 90 percent of all cone cells were linked to Müller cells. The optical-fiber effect could increase the number of photons reaching a single cone cell nearly 11-fold at its peak concentrating power, but had only a minimal effect on the light reaching rod cells.-“How optimal light guidance is matched to the absorption spectra of the cone photoreceptors is very surprising,” says Franze, who was not involved with this study. Diameter and refractive index are the “two factors [that] determine the color that optical fibers can guide efficiently,” says Labin. “Our immediate next step is to understand the exact mechanism that creates this special phenomenon.”-"Labin suggests his group's data could eventually help design better biomimetic sensors and cameras, or address the clinical implications of Müller cells' dysfunction. For now, he says, these results clear the picture on a long-standing biological question. “We finally understand how our eyes compensate for the strange, upside-down architecture of the retina.'"

Backwards retina:aids to color vision

by David Turell @, Wednesday, March 18, 2015, 17:59 (3326 days ago) @ David Turell

More refutation of the 'poor design' argument by atheists that a designer 'would have never done it' in such a backwards way. Nonsense. the design is turning out to be excellent for day and night vision:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-purpose-of-our-eyes-strange-wiring-is-unveiled/?WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20150318-"The result was easy to notice: in each layer of the retina we saw that the light was not scattered evenly, but concentrated in a few spots. These spots were continued from layer to layer, thus creating elongated columns of light leading from the entrance of the retina down to the cones at the detection layer. Light was concentrated in these columns up to ten times, compared to the average intensity.-"Even more interesting was the fact that the colours that were best guided by the glial cells matched nicely with the colours of the cones. The cones are not as sensitive as the rods, so this additional light allowed them to function better—even under lower light levels. Meanwhile, the bluer light, that was not well-captured in the glial cells, was scattered onto the rods in its vicinity.-"These results mean that the retina of the eye has been optimised so that the sizes and densities of glial cells match the colours to which the eye is sensitive (which is in itself an optimisation process suited to our needs). This optimisation is such that colour vision during the day is enhanced, while night-time vision suffers very little. The effect also works best when the pupils are contracted at high illumination, further adding to the clarity of our colour vision."

Backwards retina:aids to color vision

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Wednesday, March 18, 2015, 20:05 (3326 days ago) @ David Turell

David: "These results mean that the retina of the eye has been optimised so that the sizes and densities of glial cells match the colours to which the eye is sensitive (which is in itself an optimisation process suited to our needs). This optimisation is such that colour vision during the day is enhanced, while night-time vision suffers very little. The effect also works best when the pupils are contracted at high illumination, further adding to the clarity of our colour vision."-Those damn hippy monkey's with their molecular typewriters and genetic Shakespeare!

--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.

Backwards retina:aids to color vision

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 19, 2015, 00:05 (3326 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

David: "These results mean that the retina of the eye has been optimised so that the sizes and densities of glial cells match the colours to which the eye is sensitive (which is in itself an optimisation process suited to our needs). This optimisation is such that colour vision during the day is enhanced, while night-time vision suffers very little. The effect also works best when the pupils are contracted at high illumination, further adding to the clarity of our colour vision."
> 
> Tony:Those damn hippy monkey's with their molecular typewriters and genetic Shakespeare!-Thought you would like the entry.

Backwards retina: biomimetics great designs

by David Turell @, Thursday, November 26, 2015, 23:51 (3073 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by David Turell, Friday, November 27, 2015, 00:50

Another review of this strange but very effective design. Other biomimetic adaptations mentioned:-http://www.salvomag.com/new/articles/salvo19/19luskin.php-Biomimetics:-"The list of fascinating cases where engineers have mimicked nature to develop or improve human technology goes on and on: -• Faster Speedo swimsuits have been developed by studying the properties of sharkskin.
• Spiny hooks on plant seeds and fruits led to the development of Velcro.
• Better tire treads were created by understanding the shape of toe pads on tree frogs.
• Polar bear furs have inspired textiles and thermal collectors.
• Studying hippo sweat promises to lead to better sunscreen.
• Volvo has studied how locusts swarm without crashing into one another to develop an anti-collision system.
• Mimicking mechanisms of photosynthesis and chemical energy conversion might lead to the creation of cheaper solar cells.
• Copying the structure of sticky gecko feet could lead to the development of tape with cleaner and dryer super-adhesion.
• Color-changing cuttlefish have inspired television screens that use a fraction of the power of standard TVs.
• DNA might become a framework for building faster microchips.
• The ability of the human ear to pick up many frequencies of sound is being replicated to build better antennas.
• The Namibian fog-­basking beetle has inspired methods of desalinizing ocean water, growing crops, and producing electricity, all in one!" -***-Another reason for 'backwards':-"To achieve the high-quality vision that vertebrates need, retinal cells require a large blood supply. By facing the photoreceptor cells toward the back of the retina, and extending the optic nerve out over them, the cells are able to plug directly into the blood vessels that feed the eye, maximizing access to blood. Pro-ID biologist George Ayoub suggests a thought experiment where the optic nerve goes out the back of the retina, the way Miller and Dawkins claim it ought to be wired. Ayoub finds that this design would interfere with blood supply, as the nerve would crowd out blood vessels. In this case, the only means of restoring blood supply would be to place capillaries over the retina—but this change would block even more light than the optic nerve does under the actual design. -***-"In 2010, two eye specialists made a remarkable discovery that showed the elegant mechanism found in vertebrate eyes to solve the problem of any blockage of light due to the position of the optic nerve. Special "glial cells" sit over the retina and act like fiber-optic cables to channel light through the optic nerve wires directly onto the photoreceptor cells. According to New Scientist, these funnel-shaped cells prevent scattering of light and "act as light filters, keeping images clear."-***-"Borrowing one of nature's best designs, U.S. scientists have built an eye-shaped camera using standard sensor materials and say it could improve the performance of digital cameras and enhance imaging of the human body. -"The article reported that the "digital camera has the size, shape and layout of a human eye" because "the curved shape greatly improves the field of vision, bringing the whole picture into focus.'"-Comment: Primates have wonderful vision.

Backwards retina: biomimetics great designs

by dhw, Friday, November 27, 2015, 12:49 (3072 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Another review of this strange but very effective design. Other biomimetic adaptations mentioned:
 
http://www.salvomag.com/new/articles/salvo19/19luskin.p- Biomimetics:
 
"The list of fascinating cases where engineers have mimicked nature to develop or improve human technology goes on and on: -This is just to thank you for what indeed is a fascinating list. The inventiveness of Nature is mind-boggling, no matter what might be its source.

Backwards retina: biomimetics great designs

by David Turell @, Friday, November 27, 2015, 14:58 (3072 days ago) @ dhw


> David: http://www.salvomag.com/new/articles/salvo19/19luskin.p
> 
> Biomimetics:
> 
> "The list of fascinating cases where engineers have mimicked nature to develop or improve human technology goes on and on: 
> 
> dhw: This is just to thank you for what indeed is a fascinating list. The inventiveness of Nature is mind-boggling, no matter what might be its source.-So mind-boggling it calls to mind that a superior mind might be the inventor.

Backwards retina: helpful appendix

by David Turell @, Tuesday, December 01, 2015, 15:11 (3068 days ago) @ David Turell

Stupid atheists point to the retina as poor design, now completely refuted. Another claim is the appendix is a sign of evolution as a vestigial organ no longer needed. Not so, it aids in gut health helps in gut immunity:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151130130021.htm-"New research shows a network of immune cells helps the appendix to play a pivotal role in maintaining the health of the digestive system, supporting the theory that the appendix isn't a vestigial -- or redundant -- organ.-"The research team, a collaborative partnership between the groups of Professor Gabrielle Belz of Melbourne's Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, and Professor Eric Vivier at the Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy, France, found that innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are crucial for protecting against bacterial infection in people with compromised immune systems.-"The research team, a collaborative partnership between the groups of Professor Gabrielle Belz of Melbourne's Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, and Professor Eric Vivier at the Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy, France, found that innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are crucial for protecting against bacterial infection in people with compromised immune systems.-***-"'We've found that ILCs may help the appendix to potentially reseed 'good' bacteria within the microbiome -- or community of bacteria -- in the body. A balanced microbiome is essential for recovery from bacterial threats to gut health, such as food poisoning."-***-"'We found ILCs are part of a multi-layered protective armoury of immune cells that exist in healthy individuals. So even when one layer is depleted, the body has 'back ups' that can fight the infection.-"'In people who have compromised immune systems -- such as people undergoing cancer treatment -- these cells are vital for fighting bacterial infections in the gastrointestinal system. This is particularly important because ILCs are able to survive in the gut even during these treatments, which typically wipe out other immune cells.'"-Obvious comment: Don't try to out-think the wonders of the body.

Backwards retina: can see one photon!

by David Turell @, Friday, July 22, 2016, 19:48 (2834 days ago) @ David Turell

A recent study shows the human eye can see one photon:-http://phys.org/news/2016-07-humans-smallest.html#jCp-"Research by a team from Rockefeller University and the Research Institute of Molecular Pathology in Austria has shown that humans can detect the presence of a single photon, the smallest measurable unit of light. Previous studies had established that human subjects acclimated to the dark were capable only of reporting flashes of five to seven photons.-***-"If you imagine this, it is remarkable: a photon, the smallest physical entity with quantum properties of which light consists, is interacting with a biological system consisting of billions of cells, all in a warm and wet environment," says Vaziri. "The response that the photon generates survives all the way to the level of our awareness despite the ubiquitous background noise. Any man-made detector would need to be cooled and isolated from noise to behave the same way."-"In addition to recording the ability of the human eye to register a single photon, the researchers found that the probability of doing so was enhanced when a second photon was flashed a few seconds earlier, as if one photon "primes" the system to register the next.-***-"To arrive at their findings, Vaziri and his collaborators combined the light source with, an unprecedented psychophysics protocol called two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) in which subjects are repeatedly asked to choose between two time intervals, one of which contains a single photon while the other one is a blank. The gathered data from more than 30,000 trials demonstrated that humans can indeed detect a single photon incident on their eye with a probability significantly above chance.-"'What we want to know next is how does a biological system achieve such sensitivity? How does it achieve this in the presence of noise? Is the mechanism unique to vision or could it tell us something more general on how other systems could have evolved to detect weak signals in the presence of noise?" says Vaziri."-Comment: Vaziri notes this is an amazing achievement for a biologic system, done warm and wet, not the ultra cold that man made detectors would require. Yep, the design is upside down and backward and therefore a poor design by God, as atheists want you to believe.

Backwards retina: helpful appendix

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 11, 2017, 15:38 (2661 days ago) @ David Turell

Another study sowing the probably usefulness of the appendix. It is certainly not a vestigial organ as the atheists like to claim:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170109162333.htm

"The human appendix, a narrow pouch that projects off the cecum in the digestive system, has a notorious reputation for its tendency to become inflamed (appendicitis), often resulting in surgical removal. Although it is widely viewed as a vestigial organ with little known function, recent research suggests that the appendix may serve an important purpose. In particular, it may serve as a reservoir for beneficial gut bacteria. Several other mammal species also have an appendix, and studying how it evolved and functions in these species may shed light on this mysterious organ in humans.

***

"They mapped the data onto a phylogeny (genetic tree) to track how the appendix has evolved through mammalian evolution, and to try to determine why some species have an appendix while others don't.

"They discovered that the appendix has evolved independently in several mammal lineages, over 30 separate times, and almost never disappears from a lineage once it has appeared. This suggests that the appendix likely serves an adaptive purpose. Looking at ecological factors, such as diet, climate, how social a species is, and where it lives, they were able to reject several previously proposed hypotheses that have attempted to link the appendix to dietary or environmental factors. Instead, they found that species with an appendix have higher average concentrations of lymphoid (immune) tissue in the cecum. This finding suggests that the appendix may play an important role as a secondary immune organ. Lymphatic tissue can also stimulate growth of some types of beneficial gut bacteria, providing further evidence that the appendix may serve as a "safe house" for helpful gut bacteria.

"They also found that animals with certain shaped ceca (tapering or spiral-shaped) were more likely to have an appendix than animals with a round or cylindrical cecum. Therefore, they concluded that the appendix isn't evolving independently, but as part of a larger "cecoappendicular complex" including both the appendix and cecum."

Comment: My previous entry on this topic clearly shows an immunity function. Developing 30 times is evidence it is important. It is not poor design.

Backwards retina: 30 more cell types discovered

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 22, 2018, 18:10 (2226 days ago) @ David Turell

These are retinal ganglion cells that transmit information to the brain:

https://phys.org/news/2018-03-precision-medicine-comprehensive-human-retinal.html

"In work that brings researchers closer to the goal of precision medicine approaches to treating glaucoma and other neurodegenerative vision diseases, a new IUPUI study has, for the first time, been able to identify a wide variety of previously unknown cell subtypes in the human eye. The cells—called retinal ganglion cells, also known as RGCs—are the neurons that take visual information from the eye to the brain for processing and interpretation, which is how we see things.

"'Although RGCs have been extensively studied in the past, they are not all the same. There are more than 30 different subtypes of these cells," said study senior author Jason Meyer, associate professor of biology in the School of Science at IUPUI and a primary investigator with the Stark Neurosciences Research Institute at the Indiana University School of Medicine. "Each of these subtypes is thought to have very different functions, and they respond differently in glaucoma and other diseases that affect RGCs. Some of these cell subtypes are more susceptible to damage than others.'"

Comment: The upside down and backwards human retina has been shown to have excellent oxygen delivery and adapts beautifully to every lighting situation. These neurons are in a way an extension of the brain to provide the most exact information possible. This reeks of design.

Backwards retina: turning light to sensory signals

by David Turell @, Thursday, May 16, 2019, 21:50 (1806 days ago) @ David Turell

A series of 10-20 G-proteins is set off:

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-05-common-view-retinal-cells-mammals.html

Johns Hopkins vision scientists say that their experiments, described March 12 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, show that the number of G protein molecules activated in the cascade of reactions is far fewer—involving only 10-20 of them in the rods of mice.

The new finding matters, say the scientists, because G proteins belong to a very large family of biochemical signaling pathways called G protein-coupled-receptors, which are among the most abundant signaling pathways in biology, says King-Wai Yau, Ph.D., professor of neuroscience and ophthalmology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

***

When a photon of light hits a rod in the retina, it is absorbed by a light-sensing protein, called rhodopsin, which is embedded in membranes within the cell. Rhodopsin then activates G proteins, which, in turn, activate other enzymes. It is the number of G protein molecules activated by one rhodopsin molecule that the new experiments challenge, Yau says. He notes that other scientists had speculated that the number of activated G protein molecules may be much less than the many hundred originally proposed, but the number was difficult to directly measure in intact rods.

***

By using mathematical tools to analyze the electrical signal, Yue and Silverman found that the electrical signal triggered by a single G protein molecule was only one-twelfth to one-fourteenth the size of estimates of signals coming from a single rhodopsin molecule. Thus, they estimated that one rhodopsin activates approximately 10-20 G protein molecules.


Yau had previously found that, in a similar signaling cascade that facilitates the sense of smell in mice, one activated receptor molecule has a very low probability of activating one G protein molecule. By comparison, the finding that such signaling systems in vision trigger 10-20 molecules may reflect the visual system's unique need to detect light in very dim light conditions, without having to group together information from multiple rods, which would sacrifice spatial resolution.

Comment: More obvious evidence for the need for design. This process needs to be set up all at once, to function properly.

Backwards retina: mitochondria focus light

by David Turell @, Tuesday, April 05, 2022, 21:17 (751 days ago) @ David Turell

A study in squirrels:

https://www.quantamagazine.org/mitochondria-double-as-tiny-lenses-in-the-eye-20220405/

"A study published last month in Science Advances found that inside mammalian eyes, mitochondria, the organelles that power cells, may serve a second role as microscopic lenses, helping to focus light on the photoreceptor pigments that convert the light into neural signals for the brain to interpret.

***

"The lens at the very front of the eye focuses light from the environment onto a thin layer of tissue called the retina in the back. There, photoreceptor cells — cones that paint our world in color and rods that help us navigate in low light — absorb the light and translate it into nerve signals that propagate into the brain. But light-sensitive pigments sit at the very ends of photoreceptors, right behind a thick bundle of mitochondria. The odd placement of this bundle turns the mitochondria into seemingly unnecessary, light-scattering obstacles.

***

"Instead of being obstacles, the mitochondrial bundles seem to play a critical role in helping to funnel as much light as possible to the photoreceptors with minimal loss, Li said.

"With simulations, he and his colleagues confirmed that the lens effect was caused primarily by the mitochondrial bundle itself, not the membrane surrounding it (though the membrane played a role).

***

"Li and his colleagues think that what they saw in ground squirrels is also likely to occur in humans and other primates, who have very similar cone structures. They suggested that it could even explain a phenomenon, first reported in 1933 and called the Stiles-Crawford effect, in which light passing through the very center of the pupil is perceived as brighter than light entering at an angle. Because that central light may be more aligned with the mitochondrial bundles, the researchers think that it may get focused better onto a cone’s pigments. They suggest that measuring the Stiles-Crawford effect might help with the early detection of retinal diseases, since many of them cause damage and changes to mitochondria. Li’s team hopes to analyze how diseased mitochondria may focus light differently.

***

"At least in cones, these mitochondria may have evolved to serve as microlenses because their membranes are made up of lipids, which have a natural ability to bend light, Li said. “They’re just the best material to achieve this function.'”

Comment: so our crazy backward retina is found to be marvelously designed for sharp vision. The complaints about God doing it improperly can be cast aside.

Backwards retina: retinal controls

by David Turell @, Monday, May 22, 2023, 17:30 (339 days ago) @ David Turell

Retinal goes through a toxic phase which is enzyme controlled:

https://www.sciencealert.com/quantum-chemistry-happening-inside-your-eyes-protects-agai...

"Every color, every flash, every sunray exacts a toll on the light-sensitive tissues at the back of our eyes, producing toxic materials that risk damaging the very cells that allow us to see.

"Thankfully, the pigment responsible for darkening our hair, skin, and eyes moonlights as a clean-up crew, mopping up one such dangerous compound before it accumulates into damaging clumps.

***

"Lining the back wall of our eyeball's inner surface is a shag-pile rug of light-reactive cells called the retina. Every fiber in this carpet is packed with pancake-like stacks of discs containing a crucial substance that catches photons of light, starting a chain of reactions that results in a nervous impulse the brain interprets as sight.

"The very first step in this conversion process is a surprisingly dangerous one. The substance, called retinal, contorts into a shape that interferes with the cell's functions, effectively becoming a toxin.

"Evolution has prepared us for this inconvenience, providing enzymes that flip the twisted form of retinal back into a safe and practical shape. What's more, the eye constantly recycles the stacks of discs, dismantling from one end and shuffling fresh light-sensitive packages into place from the other.

***

"Even in individuals with a functional set of enzymes carrying out work as efficiently as possible, a gap in the breakdown process risks another potentially dangerous compound called lipofuscin building up and accumulating into dangerous clumps.

"Again, evolution has an answer, apparently in the form of the dark pigment melanin, which has been seen combining with lipofuscin granules in the retinas of older individuals.

"'It's beginning to look like melanin is nature's solution to a variety of biology's challenges," says Yale therapeutic radiologist Douglas E. Brash.

***

"A clue could be found in research revealing lipofuscin breaks apart following the introduction of reagents that produce highly reactive forms of oxygen called radicals.

"On their own, melanin's electrons aren't in a high enough energy state to perform such a task, being blocked by laws of quantum physics that keep them relatively grounded.

"But there is a rather curious loophole. Called chemexcitation, it involves the quantum fine-print of additional materials combining in a way that boosts electrons beyond levels that would typically be prevented, allowing melanin to get a little excited and produce oxygen radicals where needed.

"These quantum chemistry reactions excite a melanin electron to a high energy state and flip its spin, allowing unusual chemistry afterward," says Brash.

***

"Combining high-resolution electron microscopy, genetics, and pharmacology, Brash and his colleagues traced the origins of the melanin and lipofuscin granules and demonstrated melanin's place in the pathway of removing dangerous compounds – but they also showed melanin used its quantum-boosted state to degrade lipofuscin.

"Ideally, the knowledge might be applied to a search for pharmaceuticals that could serve as an alternative to melanin in aging individuals, breaking down lipofuscin before it can cause havoc in retinal tissues.

"'For 30 years I was convinced that melanosomes – the organelles in cells that create melanin – degrade the lipofuscin, but couldn't identify a mechanism," says the study's senior author Ulrich Schraermeyer, an experimental ophthalmologist at the University of Tübingen.

"'Chemiexcitation is the missing link, and it should let us bypass the problem that AMD begins when the eye's melanin declines with age. A drug that is chemiexcited directly may be a breakthrough for our patients."

Comment: once again the backwards retina is designed to perfection. This is a perfect example of an irreducibly complex set of reactions in which a toxic material must be produced and at the same time neutralized. Natural evolution cannot produce two opposites at the same time. Requires design.

biomimetics great designs: mussel fibers stretch

by David Turell @, Saturday, October 28, 2017, 18:24 (2371 days ago) @ David Turell

Coping what mussels do has produced fiber that can stretch and recover:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2151532-mussel-inspired-plastic-could-make-self-re...

"A new material inspired by mussels is flexing its muscles. It can stretch without snapping and repair its own molecular bonds, so it could be useful in robot joints that lift heavy objects, or for packaging to protect delicate cargo from accidental falls.

"Mussels and some other molluscs hang onto solid surfaces using an adhesive protein and tough, plasticky fibres, which are extremely strong and can repair themselves when a few molecular bonds within them are broken. For a mussel, these stretchy yet strong fibres come in handy when a wave hits.

"Megan Valentine at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and her colleagues created a plastic with these same properties by mimicking the chemistry the mussels use. Molecular bonds between iron and an organic compound called catechol make the material difficult to break or tear, while still allowing it to remain stretchy.

"The iron-catechol bonds dissipate energy from something hitting or stretching the material. These “sacrificial bonds” break, but the overall structure stays intact.

***

"By sacrificing the iron-catechol bonds, the material can stretch by 50 per cent. Then, once the stress is taken away, the bonds reform, making it reusable. Adding these bonds results in the plastic being 770 times stretchier and 58 times stronger than it is without them.

“'Typically, there’s a trade-off: you can make a material harder to break but less stretchy, or easier to break and easier to stretch,” says Niels Holten-Andersen at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “But by adding these mussel-inspired bonds, they’ve made it so that you don’t have to make that choice.”

"Something that is both strong and stretchy could act as a shock absorber in packaging for fragile objects or be used to make body armour that repairs itself on a molecular level after taking a hit, Holten-Andersen says."

Comments: Natural biologic 'inventions' teach us how to invent useful products. Is evolution itself, more brilliant than we are? Perhaps it is because God is the inventor.

biomimetics great designs: we must use bugs to produce

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 09, 2020, 01:40 (1387 days ago) @ David Turell

Great spider silk is exceptionally strong. We can't make it but we taught a bacteria do it for us:

read://https_cosmosmagazine.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcosmosmagazine.com%2Ftechnology%2Fma...

"Spider silk has a lot going for it. It’s strong, very light, biodegradable and biocompatible, and has the potential to be used in everything from tear-resistant clothing to aerospace components.

"Japanese researchers say they have succeeded in producing the thin threads, or draglines, by using photosynthetic bacteria.

"Writing in the journal Communications Biology, a team led by Keiji Numata at the RIKEN Centre for Sustainable Resource Science says the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum is ideal for establishing a sustainable bio-factory because it grows in seawater, requiring only carbon dioxide, nitrogen and solar energy.

"They genetically engineered it to produce MaSp1 protein, the main component of the Nephila spider dragline which is thought to play an important role in the strength of the spider silk.

"By optimising the gene sequence that they inserted into the bacterium’s genome, they were able, they say, to maximise the amount of silk that could be produced.

"They also found that a simple mixture of artificial seawater, bicarbonate salt, nitrogen gas, yeast extract and irradiation with near-infrared light allowed R. sulfidophilum to grow well and produce the silk protein efficiently.

"Further observations confirmed that the surface and internal structures of the fibres produced in the bacteria were very similar to those produced naturally by spiders.

“'Our current study shows the initial proof of concept for producing spider silk in photosynthetic bacteria,” Numata says. “We are now working to mass produce spider-silk dragline proteins at higher molecular weights in our photosynthetic system.'”

Comment: Simple. All we have to do is prove the point and grow factory-style masses of bacteria and sop up their product. Nature is smarter than we are, but it is really nature's designer, our God

biomimetics great designs: earwig wing folding

by David Turell @, Monday, July 13, 2020, 22:38 (1382 days ago) @ David Turell

A great design we can copy, as we didn't invent it:

https://techxplore.com/news/2020-07-insect-inspired-fans-wide-ranging-applications.html

"A highly sophisticated folding mechanism employed by a group of insects for at least 280 million years is set to become available for a wide range of applications, thanks to a design method developed and tested through multidisciplinary research by engineers and palaeobiologists.

"According to an article published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences today, researchers have recreated the complex, highly compact folding mechanisms found in the wings of earwigs with an origami-inspired geometrical method, which has potential applications across different fields of engineering.


"The hind wings of earwigs fold automatically under small leathery forewings when the animal is not in flight, employing a specialized folding pattern that reduces surface area ten to 15 times or more depending on the species. This is the most compact wing folding found in insects and gives earwigs unparalleled ground mobility for a flying insect. With the wings protected and their abdomens fully flexible, earwigs are able to wriggle into the soil and other narrow spaces, as well as use their characteristic rear pincers.

"Despite the outstanding potential for engineering of the earwig wing and its unique properties, a method for designing their complex folding patterns had not been resolved, hindering practical applications.

***

"The wings of modern earwigs show little variation across their approximately 2,000 living species, with shape and folding patterns remaining remarkably stable through evolution because of their specialized function," says Dr. Ricardo Pérez-de la Fuente, an insect palaeobiologist from Oxford University Museum of Natural History and co-author of the work. "However, a group of long-extinct insects—the protelytropterans—possessed fan-like wings similar to those of earwigs, but different enough to test the consistency of the new design method. Our work shows how paleontology can be of interest for practical applications."

"The new method defines the geometrical constraints for the fan-like wings of both earwigs and their deep-time protelytropteran relatives to remain functional. This allowed the researchers to project extinct, hypothetical intermediate forms between the two groups, shedding light on possible evolutionary pathways that could have led to the sophisticated wings of modern earwigs.

"'Nature has consistently been an everlasting source of inspiration," says Prof Zhong You, from Oxford University's Department of Engineering Science and co-author of the work. "Bioinspired technologies keep offering some of the most efficient and sustainable ways to meet many of the challenges of the future.'" (my bold)

Comment: Nature continues to be smarter than we are, or might I say the designer is smarter.

biomimetics great designs: ones we can't copy

by David Turell @, Sunday, October 04, 2020, 15:01 (1299 days ago) @ David Turell

We try to mimic natural products and did with Velcro, but often we cannot:

http://nautil.us/blog/why-we-should-eat-crickets-and-other-bug-ideas?mc_cid=39e5b91c5a&...

"In his new book, The Butterfly Effect: Insects and the Making of the Modern World, Edward Melillo calls some insects “little laboratories,” the various productions of which have supported our material world for millennia.

***

"While the synthetic age of the last century ushered in many alternatives to insect goo, there has been a more recent return to the genius of their toil, which Homo sapiens has yet to improve on. Melillo traces the history of these bugs and their products as a query into modernity’s attainments and its discontents.

***

“'Most of us are aware,” he said, “that bees, butterflies, beetles, and flies are integral to three-fourths of the world’s flowering plants and a third of our food crops. It isn’t as widely understood that tiny creatures like lac bugs, silkworms, and cochineal insects have played fundamental roles in global development.”

"Nautilus caught up with Melillo to get a better sense of how much we rely on insects that many of us know little about.

"You call these bugs laboratories, which is provocative when we consider they have six legs each and often convene by the hundreds of thousands.

"Yes, female lac bugs—Kerria lacca—swarm in gigantic numbers, laying eggs on fig and acacia trees. They secrete a resin that for thousands of years has been harvested and filtered, made into sticky sheets that eventually dry and are cracked into shell-like flakes that inspire our word for the product: shellac.

"You had your shellac bug epiphany listening to an Ella Fitzgerald recording.

"Yes, “in the groove”! The original 78 rpm records that made transmission of recorded sound possible were made of shellac. I realized that the production of this substance reached back to some original moment when indigenous Southeast Asians figured out human purposes for this stuff. The innovation of one age depended on a traditional history of local, applied knowledge, seemingly far from its source.

"You date East Indian trade in shellac back to the 1500s if not earlier.

"Shellac was used in everything from Ayurvedic healing tinctures to varnishing furniture, and Europeans were eager customers.

"And the stuff was not easily replicable.

"No, and this is a big theme in my book. Shellac was and is an insect commodity, made by the insects. Supervising and managing insect production of shellac depends on an intimate knowledge of insect life cycles—the timing of reproduction and egg-laying, regional weather patterns, best harvesting practices and so on. In the 1950s, science came up with synthetic polymers that in large part replaced lac secretions as the basis of proto-plastics. But then came a backlash—environmental toxicity. Shellac has reemerged as a biodegradable, nontoxic alternative and is widely used in pharmaceutical products, on the grocery shelves, and in many types of cosmetics.

"Thanks to the Silk Road, the contribution of silkworms to the history of global trade is more widely appreciated.

"Like the secretions of lac bugs, those of Bombyx mori have fundamentally imbued and comprised our material culture. The making of silk fabric based on the production of caterpillars extends to 2640 B.C.E., when a Chinese empress first appreciated the strength and delicacy of their threads. Silk fabric made its way around the globe, lending beauty and tensile strength to body coverings and more.

***

"There’s an “ew” factor around bug products. For example, that big kerfuffle when it was discovered that Starbucks was using ground up cochineal bugs to color one of its red drinks.

"Another ancient-to-modern story, the crushed bodies of cochineal insects (Dactylopius coccus) have provided a brilliant carmine dye for worldly goods, including papal vestments and strawberry yogurt. For more than 250 years, the trade in cochineal insects was a driver of the Spanish Empire’s transatlantic trade. The process of globalization helped transfer cloth-coloring knowledge across the Americas. Cochineal insects have greatly added to the beauty of the world, but maybe people don’t like the idea of drinking them. (Starbucks replaced the cochineal with a vegetable dye.)

***

"Domesticating some insects and using their natural products is a viable alternative in many cases. And as the human population expands, we are going to have to find better ways to feed ourselves without further decimating the environment.

"I know where you’re going with this and it’s ruining my appetite.

"One pound of crickets provides three times the protein, as well as more iron and nutrients, than a pound of beef."

Comment: Natural products are still better than our inventions

biomimetics great designs: one lubricant beats Teflon

by David Turell @, Wednesday, July 07, 2021, 21:53 (1023 days ago) @ David Turell

Found in beetle legs:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2283348-lubricant-found-in-a-beetles-leg-is-more-s...

"A lubricant harvested from beetle legs reduces friction more than Teflon. The wax-like material could be used in microrobotics and small prosthetics, if a cost-effective way to synthesise it can be found.

"Many beetles are known to have a natural lubricant in their joints that prevents wear and tear. But Konstantin Nadein at the University of Kiel in Germany and his colleagues discovered that a species of darkling beetle called Zophobas morio has a particularly large amount of this substance, which displays unusually potent properties.

"The team found that pores in the shell of the beetle around the leg joint exude the waxy lubricant in cylinders up to 1 micrometre wide. It is spread around when the joint moves.


"Researchers harvested the protein-based substance and tested its friction-reducing ability by placing it between two small pieces of glass and measuring how much force was required to slide one over the other. The team found that friction was lowered even more than by Teflon (polytetrafluoroethylene), a material used on non-stick surfaces such as frying pans.


"The research also suggests the insect lubricant has other functions. Under a high load, chunks of it deformed and created a squashable layer between two surfaces that acted like a shock absorber and prevented abrasive contact."

comment: Nature is always way ahead of us. Or should I say God?

biomimetics great designs: owl wing design reduces noise

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 19, 2022, 16:43 (827 days ago) @ David Turell

Very clever for a flying carnivore:

https://phys.org/news/2022-01-owl-wing-aircraft-turbine-noise.html

"'Nocturnal owls produce about 18 decibels less noise than other birds at similar flight speeds due to their unique wing configuration," said author Xiaomin Liu. "Moreover, when the owl catches prey, the shape of the wings is also constantly changing, so the study of the wing edge configuration during owl flight is of great significance."

"Trailing-edge noise is generated when airflow passes along the back of an airfoil. The flow forms a turbulent layer of air along the upper and lower surfaces of the airfoil, and when that layer of air flows back through the trailing edge, it scatters and radiates noise.

"Previous studies explored serrated trailing edges, finding that the serrations effectively reduce the noise of rotating machinery. However, the noise reduction was not universal, depending heavily on the final application.

***

"The team used noise calculation and analysis software to conduct a series of detailed theoretical studies of simplified airfoils with characteristics reminiscent of owl wings. They applied their findings to suppress the noise of rotating machinery.

"Improving the flow conditions around the trailing edge and optimizing the shape of the edge suppressed the noise. Interestingly, asymmetric serrations reduced the noise more than their symmetric counterparts.

"Noise reduction varied with different operating conditions, so the scientists emphasized that the airfoil designs should be further evaluated based on the specific application.

"For example, wind turbines have complex incoming flow environments, which require a more general noise reduction technology. Examining noise reduction techniques under the influence of different incoming flows would make their conclusions more universal."

Comment: as usual nature designs are better than ours so we must copy God's designs.

biomimetics great designs: camel noses sense humidity

by David Turell @, Thursday, January 20, 2022, 19:26 (826 days ago) @ David Turell

We don't and must use instruments:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/01/220119142819.htm

"Camels have a renowned ability to survive on little water. They are also adept at finding something to drink in the vast desert, using noses that are exquisite moisture detectors. In a new study in ACS Nano, researchers describe a humidity sensor inspired by the structure and properties of camels' noses. In experiments, they found this device could reliably detect variations in humidity in settings that included industrial exhaust and the air surrounding human skin.

***

"Narrow, scroll-like passages within a camel's nose create a large surface area, which is lined with water-absorbing mucus. To mimic the high-surface-area structure within the nose, the team created a porous polymer network. On it, they placed moisture-attracting molecules called zwitterions to simulate the property of mucus to change capacitance as humidity varies. In experiments, the device was durable and could monitor fluctuations in humidity in hot industrial exhaust, find the location of a water source and sense moisture emanating from the human body. Not only did the sensor respond to changes in a person's skin perspiration as they exercised, it detected the presence of a human finger and could even follow its path in a V or L shape. This sensitivity suggests that the device could become the basis for a touchless interface through which someone could communicate with a computer, according to the researchers. What's more, the sensor's electrical response to moisture can be tuned or adjusted, much like the signals sent out by human neurons -- potentially allowing it to learn via artificial intelligence, they say."

Comment: Great design, as usual better than the ones we make. Did this come with the original camelids? One can propose starting close to a desert and by slowly venturing out the design develops. But the complexity is precise and effective and I believe far beyond dhw's wishes for cellular intelligence. Cells just ain't that smart, even if given design ability by God as dhw always theorizes. A purposeful God sees established endpoints to development by evolution. Cell designers don't have God's foresight or His direct abilities. That makes dhw's designer cells as secondhand designers n ot llikely to give God the results He definitely wants.

biomimetics great designs: designing DNA to store data

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 03, 2022, 22:33 (784 days ago) @ David Turell

A new way copying the natural design of the genome:

https://phys.org/news/2022-03-future-storage-double-helical.html

"DNA is nature's original data storage system. We can use it to store any kind of data: images, video, music—anything," said Kasra Tabatabaei, a researcher at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology and a co-author on this study.

"Expanding DNA's molecular makeup and developing a precise new sequencing method enabled a multi-institutional team to transform the double helix into a robust, sustainable data storage platform.

***

"From scientists to social media influencers, anyone with information to store stands to benefit from a secure, sustainable data lock box—and the double helix fits the bill.

"'DNA is one of the best options, if not the best option, to store archival data especially," said Chao Pan, a graduate student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and a co-author on this study.

"Its longevity rivaled only by durability, DNA is designed to weather Earth's harshest conditions—sometimes for tens of thousands of years—and remain a viable data source. Scientists can sequence fossilized strands to uncover genetic histories and breathe life into long-lost landscapes.

***

"'Every day, several petabytes of data are generated on the internet. Only one gram of DNA would be sufficient to store that data. That's how dense DNA is as a storage medium," said Tabatabaei, who is also a fifth-year Ph.D. student.

***

"In nature, every strand of DNA contains four chemicals—adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine—often referred to by the initials A, G, C, and T. They arrange and rearrange themselves along the double helix into combinations that scientists can decode, or sequence, to make meaning.

"The researchers expanded DNA's already broad capacity for information storage by adding seven synthetic nucleobases to the existing four-letter lineup.

"'Imagine the English alphabet. If you only had four letters to use, you could only create so many words. If you had the full alphabet, you could produce limitless word combinations. That's the same with DNA. Instead of converting zeroes and ones to A, G, C, and T, we can convert zeroes and ones to A, G, C, T, and the seven new letters in the storage alphabet," Tabatabaei said.

"Because this team is the first to use chemically modified nucleotides for information storage in DNA, members innovated around a unique challenge: Not all current technology is capable of interpreting chemically modified DNA strands. To solve this problem, they combined machine learning and artificial intelligence to develop a first-of-its-kind DNA sequence readout processing method.

"Their solution can discern modified chemicals from natural ones, and differentiate each of the seven new molecules from one another.

"We tried 77 different combinations of the 11 nucleotides, and our method was able to differentiate each of them perfectly," Pan said. "The deep learning framework as part of our method to identify different nucleotides is universal, which enables the generalizability of our approach to many other applications."

"This letter-perfect translation comes courtesy of nanopores: proteins with an opening in the middle through which a DNA strand can easily pass. Remarkably, the team found that nanopores can detect and distinguish each individual monomer unit along the DNA strand—whether the units have natural or chemical origins.

"'This work provides an exciting proof-of-principle demonstration of extending macromolecular data storage to non-natural chemistries, which hold the potential to drastically increase storage density in non-traditional storage media," said Charles Schroeder, the James Economy Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and a co-PI on this study."

Comment: DNA is a fabulous coding design. It did not pop up by chance. As usual we can turn to nature to find useful solutions, and here to improve upon them. Our God-given brains are no match for His, but ours let us improve upon what He has provided.

biomimetics great designs: ones we can copy

by David Turell @, Monday, May 16, 2022, 19:57 (710 days ago) @ David Turell

The seed pod of the maple tree helps design better drone:

https://techxplore.com/news/2022-05-tiny-drone-based-maple-seed.html

"A trio of researchers at City University of Hong Kong has developed a tiny drone based on the maple seed pod. In their paper published in the journal Science Robotics, Songnan Bai, Qingning He and Pakpong Chirarattananon, describe how they used the maple seed pod as an inspiration for increasing flight time in under 100-gram drones.

"Maple seed pods are well known for their helicopter-type design. As they fall from the tree, they spin like a helicopter rotor with no engine, increasing their distance from the tree as they are blown afar. In this new effort, the researchers sought to take advantage of the efficiency inherent in the structure of the maple seed pod to increase flight time for tiny drones. To that end, they built a tiny drone that can spin like the maple seed pod to keep aloft. The resulting drone could fly for nearly twice as long as those with a traditional four-rotor design.

"Most drones have spinning rotors to provide lift. This new design features two tiny rotors at the tips of the wings to make them spin—the lift comes courtesy of the spinning wings, which accounts for its improvements in efficiency. The researchers also added electronics and a battery at the center of the drone. The whole thing weighs less than 35 grams and spins at approximately 200 rpm. Testing showed it capable of hovering in the air for up to 24 minutes. The researchers note that due to the inherent stability of the design, no stabilizing microprocessor is needed. They also noted that they were able to realize position-controlled flight by manipulating the speed of the tiny rotors.

"The researchers also tested the ability of the drone to carry a small payload, including a camera. Because the camera spins with the drone, they synched its framerate to coincide with the drone's spin rate, producing a somewhat shaky but usable video feed. They also demonstrated its ability to carry a 21.5-gram device to conduct mapping and surveillance operations."

Comment: the original designer is much better than we are

biomimetics great designs: ones we can copy

by David Turell @, Wednesday, June 01, 2022, 19:14 (694 days ago) @ David Turell

Dandelion seed dispersal:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/06/220601111753.htm

"Known for their fluffiness and uncanny ability to help children tell the time, dandelions provide essential early-Spring food for pollinators like bees, birds, butterflies, and moths.

"Their seeds are some of the best flyers in nature, catching the wind and spreading as far as 100 kilometres. Part of how they do this is by tuning their flight depending on the weather. (my bold)

"Each dandelion seed is tethered by a thin tube to around 100 bristles, which form the parachute-like structure. When seeds break free from the flower head, these bundles of hairs catch the wind and carry their seeds. This hairy parachute closes when the air is humid, which often means the wind is weak. In drier, more windy conditions, dandelions widen their parachutes to better catch the wind so the seeds can fly freely.

"Their work, published in Nature Communications, found the seed-carrying parachutes open and close using something like actuators -- devices that convert signals into movement -- without using energy.

"The centre of the parachutes senses the humidity of their immediate environment by absorbing water molecules from the air. Responding to these humidity signals, they 'decide' to either open their parachutes and fly away, or to close their parachutes and stay put.

"They also found that the actuator has a unique radial, tube-like design to which the parachute hairs are attached to ensure simultaneous movement. The actuator changes its shape to either open or close their parachutes.

***

"They found that parachute opening is modulated by the level of humidity in the atmosphere: higher humidity triggered swelling in the actuator and mechanical movement of hairs upwards, which closed the parachutes. Some regions of the actuator swelled noticeably, whereas others, such as the vasculature, barely changed. They observed that the actuator shape change was caused by uptake and release of water droplets, creating a crease in the area the parachute hairs are attached.

***

"Plant structures can serve as important inspiration for soft robotics as, like plants, these robots don't use joints or rigid parts to move appendages. Finding out how dandelion parachutes respond to their environment by moving many appendages simultaneously could help engineers create robots that move multiple fingers and arms with very simple yet functional designs. The way the dandelion actuator changes shape in some regions but not others can also teach us about mechanisms of shaping and movement in soft robots and biological tissues."

Comment: this seems to be a physical reaction to water vapor, but it is possible some biochemical reactions may be helping yet to be discovered. Teh plant doesn't know it needs good seed dispersal, but a designer obviously would recognize the need. Another biomimetic design to help our engineers.

Backwards retina: cells guide light

by David Turell @, Saturday, June 08, 2019, 23:49 (1783 days ago) @ David Turell

More on how light is guided to retina to overcome low light vision:

https://phys.org/news/2019-06-genome-nucleus.html

"Research carried out by a team led by Irina Solovei at LMU's Biocenter, in cooperation with Job Dekker (University of Massachusetts Medical School) and physicists from the group of Leonid Mirny at MIT (Institute for Medical Engineering and Science) now suggests that the driving force in chromatin segregation is the inactive heterochromatin and that in the 'default' chromatin distribution of euchromatin and heterochromatin are reversed. The new findings appear in the leading journal Nature.

***

"Many mechanisms have been proposed to explain how chromatin is segregated within the nucleus, however none of them were conclusive, largely, because it is difficult to analyze the interactions of the two chromatin types in the context of conventional nuclei with heterochromatin tethered to the nuclear membrane. "For our study, we therefore chose so called inverted cell nuclei," says Solovei. She and her Munich colleagues discovered these nuclei about 10 years ago in the retina of nocturnally active mammals, where they are restricted to the type of photoreceptor cells known as rods. In rods, the tightly condensed heterochromatin is packed in the interior of the nuclei, while the active euchromatin is localized directly under the nuclear membrane—a unique exception to the general rule. It turned out that the heterochromatin core of rod nuclei serves as a microlens condensing light and thus improving optical properties in the nocturnal retinas. Subsequent study from the same group disclosed the mechanism of inversion by revealing that these atypical nuclei lack two protein complexes that normally link the heterochromatin to the inner surface of the nuclear membrane, the nuclear lamina.

Comment: What this means is junk DNA is used to focus light in the rods. Confirmed by this commentary:

https://evolutionnews.org/2009/04/shoddy_engineering_or_intellig/

Reporting in the journal Cell, Irina Solovei and coworkers have just discovered that, in contrast to the nucleus organization seen in ganglion and bipolar cells of the retina, a remarkable inversion of chromosome band localities occurs in the rod photoreceptors of mammals with night vision (Solovei I, Kreysing M, Lanctôt C, Kösem S, Peichl L, Cremer T, Guck J, Joffe B. 2009. “Nuclear Architecture of Rod Photoreceptor Cells Adapts to Vision in Mammalian Evolution.” Cell 137(2): 356-368). First, the C-bands of all the chromosomes including the centromere coalesce in the center of the nucleus to produce a dense chromocenter. Keep in mind that the DNA backbone of this chromocenter in different mammals is repetitive and highly species-specific. Second, a shell of LINE-rich G-band sequences surrounds the C-bands. Finally, the R-bands including all examined protein-coding genes are placed next to the nuclear envelope. The nucleus of this cell type is also smaller so as to make the pattern more compact. This ordered movement of billions of basepairs according to their “barcode status” begins in the rod photoreceptor cells at birth, at least in the mouse, and continues for weeks and months. Why the elaborate repositioning of so much “junk” DNA in the rod cells of nocturnal mammals? The answer is optics. A central cluster of chromocenters surrounded by a layer of LINE-dense heterochromatin enables the nucleus to be a converging lens for photons, so that the latter can pass without hindrance to the rod outer segments that sense light. In other words, the genome regions with the highest refractive index — undoubtedly enhanced by the proteins bound to the repetitive DNA — are concentrated in the interior, followed by the sequences with the next highest level of refractivity, to prevent against the scattering of light. The nuclear genome is thus transformed into an optical device that is designed to assist in the capturing of photons. This chromatin-based convex (focusing) lens is so well constructed that it still works when lattices of rod cells are made to be disordered. Normal cell nuclei actually scatter light. So the next time someone tells you that it “strains credulity” to think that more than a few pieces of “junk DNA” could be functional in the cell — that the data only point to the lack of design and suboptimality — remind them of the rod cell nuclei of the humble mouse.

Comment: Never question God's designs as wrong!

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