Links to brief bits of information and amazing facts.
- Faux photosynthesis
"Greg Van Patten may be the only materials scientist who claims
chlorophyll as his muse. A bioscience researcher at Los Alamos
National Laboratory, Van Patten is developing films that could be used
to coat roofing tiles.Dyes in the film would imitate photosynthesis,
collecting energy from the sun and converting it to electricity. On a
clear day, the sun transmits about a kilowatt of power per square
meter. While plants use that energy to convert water and CO2 into
food, Van Patten's tiles can use the energy to power your VCR or Mr.
Coffee - and we're talking about hours of video and many pots of
coffee. Traditional semiconductor solar cells collect only a limited
portion of the light spectrum, but the Los Alamos tiles are treated
with layers of films, each tinted with a dye designed to absorb a
particular wavelength of light. A stack of different-colored layers
can soak up many wavelengths of light." From a Wired article Small
Parts: A users' guide to out-of-the-box living.
- "The oceans cover over 70% of the
Earth's surface. Just from the sheer coverage and volume, the
phytoplankton environment can be thought of as the world's most
expansive jungle. Its affect on the Earth's life, climate, and geology
is significant. Being at the bottom of the pelagic food-chain, it is
literally the source of most oceanic life. Through photosynthesis, it
may affect the Earth's climate by absorbing a significant portion of
the world's carbon dioxide. When phytoplankton die, if their carbon is
not consumed by other living creatures first, it settles on the ocean
bottom and eventually is locked-up in sedimentary rock. This rock can
reenter the Earth's crust from which it may be eventually emitted back
into the atmosphere again through volcanism; part of the process known
as the carbon cycle, which affects long-term global change. "
From: MODIS
OPP/SCF: Overview, NASA scientists that are studying
phytoplankton.
- "An average hectare of corn
produces enough oxygen per hectare per day in mid summer to meet the
respiratory needs of about 325 people. This means that the one million
or so hectares of corn grown in Ontario produce enough oxygen for the
annual respiratory needs of Ontario's 10 million residents in about 11
summer days!" From: Corn
and Photosynthesis
- "It is hard to see under the
sea-particularly if you are 120 meters down, lying beneath a thick
covering of ice during the endless nights of the Antarctic winter. Yet
even in this deep night, hoards of tiny algae live inside sponges,
soaking up carbon dioxide and, in turn, producing nutrients for their
hosts. The mystery has been where these minute green plants get the
light they need to drive photosynthesis." From: Scientific
American: Science and the Citizen (February, 1997)
- "Besides its role in catalyzing
plant growth, Rubisco has two traits that invite--and
defy--analysis. While most enzymes catalyze only one reaction, Rubisco
triggers two. One is carbon fixation, the basis of photosynthesis,
which enables plants to make food. The other--and here's the rub--is a
competing, oxygen-fixation reaction that actually undoes
photosynthesis. Picture a nozzle pumping gasoline into your car, and
inside, a smaller siphon removing gas at the same time." From: Life
Sciences - Staff of Life
- "Scientists have recently
discovered microorganisms living within igneous formations --
extremely hard rock lacking organic nutrients. The industrious
residents of these rocks fashion their own organic molecules out of
the barest of inorganic materials.
Relying only on hydrogen, water, and carbon dioxide -- all of which
are products of Earth's interior --these microbes are unique among the
vast array of living species. All other organisms depend to some
extent on the sun's energy, which is harnessed through photosynthesis
and creates food for surface life. Even organisms living near seafloor
vents rely indirectly on the oxygen supplied by photosynthesis, says
Todd O. Stevens of Battelle." From: Deep
Dwellers: Microbes Thrive Far Below Ground (Science News, 151:
192-193--not all life needs photosynthesis, but the exceptions are
pretty amazing!
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