Have you heard of the Flagellar motor (rotary motor)?
Maybe we are alone in the universe
- FLEKTARN
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Re: Maybe we are alone in the universe
Have you heard of the Flagellar motor (rotary motor)?
The one that says the least can often have a very different perspective and hold the answer. The least qualified person may hold the most wisdom. When you don’t have knowledge or experience blocking your perspective, you can see problems and solutions.
- BigP
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Re: Maybe we are alone in the universe
- FLEKTARN
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- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 7:46 pm
- Location: Varna / Salzburg
Re: Maybe we are alone in the universe
Yep dee doo. You literally have a Wankel motor in your body, on a cellular level.
Gotta love the Mazdas.
Now in all seriousness, do see this, sir. It has a rotor, stator, U-joints, etc. Many swimming bacteria are propelled by flagellar filaments driven by a rotary motor. Each of these tiny motors can generate an impressive torque.
The bacterial flagellar motor (BFM) consists of a rotary motor embedded in the cell envelope connected to an extracellular helical propeller. The motor is powered by the flow of ions down an electrochemical gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane into the cell.
Most remarkably, the motor builds itself by assembling its constituent parts. It's one of the pinnacles of evolution, and, from a nanotechnology standpoint, it routinely outperforms our latest man-made nanomachines.
It is perhaps not surprising then that such complexity and technology has been hijacked for use as proof, via intelligent design, of the existence of a creator.
PHOTO:
http://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/103/5/ ... nload=true
Gotta love the Mazdas.
Now in all seriousness, do see this, sir. It has a rotor, stator, U-joints, etc. Many swimming bacteria are propelled by flagellar filaments driven by a rotary motor. Each of these tiny motors can generate an impressive torque.
The bacterial flagellar motor (BFM) consists of a rotary motor embedded in the cell envelope connected to an extracellular helical propeller. The motor is powered by the flow of ions down an electrochemical gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane into the cell.
Most remarkably, the motor builds itself by assembling its constituent parts. It's one of the pinnacles of evolution, and, from a nanotechnology standpoint, it routinely outperforms our latest man-made nanomachines.
It is perhaps not surprising then that such complexity and technology has been hijacked for use as proof, via intelligent design, of the existence of a creator.
PHOTO:
http://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/103/5/ ... nload=true
The one that says the least can often have a very different perspective and hold the answer. The least qualified person may hold the most wisdom. When you don’t have knowledge or experience blocking your perspective, you can see problems and solutions.
- BigP
- Posts: 4970
- Joined: Mon Mar 19, 2018 3:56 pm
Re: Maybe we are alone in the universe
Sounds like it is denial of the physics involed, Those bacteria need to feed on something "FLEKTARN wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 5:56 pmYep dee doo. You literally have a Wankel motor in your body, on a cellular level.
Gotta love the Mazdas.
Now in all seriousness, do see this, sir. It has a rotor, stator, U-joints, etc. Many swimming bacteria are propelled by flagellar filaments driven by a rotary motor. Each of these tiny motors can generate an impressive torque.
The bacterial flagellar motor (BFM) consists of a rotary motor embedded in the cell envelope connected to an extracellular helical propeller. The motor is powered by the flow of ions down an electrochemical gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane into the cell.
Most remarkably, the motor builds itself by assembling its constituent parts. It's one of the pinnacles of evolution, and, from a nanotechnology standpoint, it routinely outperforms our latest man-made nanomachines.
It is perhaps not surprising then that such complexity and technology has been hijacked for use as proof, via intelligent design, of the existence of a creator.
PHOTO:
http://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/103/5/ ... nload=true
In physics, the law of conservation of energy states that the total energy of an isolated system remains constant, it is said to be conserved over time. This law means that energy can neither be created nor destroyed; rather, it can only be transformed or transferred from one form to another.
- FLEKTARN
- Posts: 1525
- Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2018 7:46 pm
- Location: Varna / Salzburg
Re: Maybe we are alone in the universe
I wouldn't go into details and try and change biology without even a simple microscope. I can give a ton of other examples too.
The one that says the least can often have a very different perspective and hold the answer. The least qualified person may hold the most wisdom. When you don’t have knowledge or experience blocking your perspective, you can see problems and solutions.
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