1. Why haven't we copied the bacterial motor using solid state devices? (think transistors)
2. The motor in bacteria uses flow of protons instead of electrons, why don't we also use protons to power our electronics? Does it matter if you use electrons vs protons? (more mass means more power ?)
By the way, are the flagella motors in protozoa similar to bacterial flagella? (do they work in a similar way?)
Kayden Hill
posting more cute biomachines
Kayden Garcia
...
Oliver Gomez
>tfw when 900 million years ago we were once one of these things
Kayden Cruz
fuck flagella, plants are where it's at
>self-reinforcing >self-replicating >efficient exploration of space as modified by available resources plants are the engineering tool we never realized we wanted
Gabriel Hall
well not really, we're evolved forms, so that means we share a common ancestor (that's our real grand-grand....-grand pappy).
But also each time a species evolves you can't really say that the root species is the same as the leaf species, they're two totally different species they just share a few things.
Carter Martin
Thats what I meant user 900 million years ago our ancestors were similar to these things.
Joseph Hernandez
>900 million years ago our ancestors were similar to these things. except you don't know that
Noah Rodriguez
yeah but even though they're simple we can still learn a lot from them.
Nolan Parker
900 million years ago all life was similar to Amoebas so our ancestors had to be similar to these lifeforms from that long ago. Its only until 700 million years ago the first multicellular life began.
Jayden Kelly
up to ferns, plant sperm is flagellated
Brayden Edwards
How exactly did stuff like this even evolve? Can this complexity be reduced?
Kevin Rivera
Yes, they recently did a study on different bacteria and they saw that some had more complex motors than others.
seems like using protons is much more efficient than using electrons. 1000 protons for 1 rotation, while it probably takes 10^12 electrons to do the same thing.
John James
I'm sorry i never went to school ... Op is a nanobot?
Aaron Cox
>more mass means more power
nigger that doesn't make sense
Electricity makes shit spin around via magnetism not with the mass of electrons
Austin Clark
What
Ethan Ward
>organisms >simple >ever
Luke Cruz
Pretty sure not, after our lineages separated the lineage leading to Euglena didn't stop evolving. It's very different in terms of looks and physiology to its ancestors.
Nicholas Ortiz
2. Bacteria cannot use electrons directly because free electrons are unstable in aqueous conditions. Protons are only really advantageous for current carrying when water is present.
Thomas Sanders
Sure but nobody gives a shit about lower plants
Noah Perez
>How exactly did stuff like this even evolve? mutation → variety → selection repeat for a million generations