Switch Theme:

Mother Nature invents the gear... what?  [RSS] Share on facebook Share on Twitter Submit to Reddit
»
Author Message
Advert


Forum adverts like this one are shown to any user who is not logged in. Join us by filling out a tiny 3 field form and you will get your own, free, dakka user account which gives a good range of benefits to you:
  • No adverts like this in the forums anymore.
  • Times and dates in your local timezone.
  • Full tracking of what you have read so you can skip to your first unread post, easily see what has changed since you last logged in, and easily see what is new at a glance.
  • Email notifications for threads you want to watch closely.
  • Being a part of the oldest wargaming community on the net.
If you are already a member then feel free to login now.




Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Burtucky, Michigan

http://www.latimes.com/science/la-sci-leg-gears-20130914,0,1476077.story


Pretty neat eh ?




Gears may seem like a purely human invention. And yet the basic interlocking mechanism found inside grandfather clocks and car steering systems has now turned up in the remarkably powerful legs of young planthopper insects.

The discovery, published in Friday's edition of the journal Science, provides the first known example of working gears that evolved in a living being.

"It's a wonderful example of the clever solutions that nature comes up with," said Robert Full, a biomechanist at UC Berkeley who was not involved in the study. "It was brilliant."

While examining flightless planthopper insects in the genus Issus, University of Cambridge neurobiologist Malcolm Burrows discovered that the young insects' legs had gear teeth that locked into place while jumping.

"We weren't deliberately looking for it. Why would we?" said Burrows, who conducted the research with University of Bristol engineer Gregory Sutton. "There's been no description of gear wheels functioning in animals before. "

Issus planthoppers make fleas and other jumping insects look like junior varsity pole-vaulters. The adult bugs can leap with an acceleration of roughly 500 Gs in a matter of milliseconds. An average human can withstand about 5 Gs of acceleration before passing out.

To figure out what made these insects so springy, the researchers ventured outdoors to gather a few bugs, with a little help from the sharp eyes of Burrows' young grandson. Some of the planthoppers were adults, and some were nymphs.

The pair used a high-speed camera to photograph the planthoppers while they jumped. That's when they spotted the gear teeth on the insides of the insects' equivalent of thighs. Each gear strip was about 350 to 400 micrometers long — about half as thick as a credit card — with about 10 to 12 teeth in each.

The discovery was shocking. Burrows had been studying jumping insects for a long time, and he'd never seen anything like it.

Other insects, like grasshoppers, use their legs to push their bodies straight up. But the planthoppers' legs move more like a breaststroke, splaying out to the sides while propelling the body upward.

That method of locomotion can be tricky. If one leg fires first, the planthopper will end up spinning, like a one-armed breast-stroke swimmer.

But sending a signal from the brain to coordinate both legs takes time and extra neural bandwidth. So the planthopper's body has an ingenious solution that keeps the legs in step without a thought. When one leg starts to jump, the gear teeth on that leg engage with the gear teeth on the other so they both push off at the same time.

Using the gear method, the insects' legs can synchronize within 30 microseconds. If the insect had to think about synchronizing its legs, Burrows said, it would take one or two milliseconds to send a message from its brain to its muscles.

In other words, the gear method is tens of times faster than a single bug thought.

Oddly, only the nymphs have these gears, Burrows and Sutton discovered. The adults lose the gears when they're fully grown; apparently, they can generate enough friction between their strong, solid legs.

But if this is such a handy engineering tool, why not keep using it into adulthood? Perhaps it's because of wear and tear, Burrows said.

If you break a tooth on a gear in your car or your bike, you have to get it fixed. Nymphs don't have repair shops, but because they shed their bodies into progressively larger exoskeletons as they grow, they're constantly getting upgrades anyway. Once they're adults, stuck in their permanent bodies, they don't have that luxury.

While humans have been doing pretty well with their man-made gears, the insect's design could still provide insight for engineers, Burrows said. For example, these gear teeth are asymmetrical rather than uniform. Because they need to work only in one direction on the insect, perhaps the odd shape maximizes the bang for their potential energy buck.

There are other "ornamental cogs" in nature, the authors wrote in Science, such as those on the shell of the cog wheel turtle Heosemys spinosa. Crocodile hearts also have a toothed cog valve that may help them stay under water for longer periods by redirecting blood flow to their most vital organs.

In any case, the research shows it's rarely wise to underestimate evolution, the scientists said.

"Any statement that you make like that, that something is uniquely human is just waiting to be disproven," Full said.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/09/16 11:25:14


 
   
Made in nl
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.
   
Made in gb
Renegade Inquisitor de Marche






Elephant Graveyard

 Soladrin wrote:
Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.

Oh yeah?

Dakka Bingo! By Ouze
"You are the best at flying things"-Kanluwen
"Further proof that Purple is a fething brilliant super villain " -KingCracker
"Purp.. Im pretty sure I have a gun than can reach you...."-Nicorex
"That's not really an apocalypse. That's just Europe."-Grakmar
"almost as good as winning free cake at the tea drinking contest for an Englishman." -Reds8n
Seal up your lips and give no words but mum.
Equip, Reload. Do violence.
Watch for Gerry. 
   
Made in fr
Trazyn's Museum Curator





on the forum. Obviously

 purplefood wrote:
 Soladrin wrote:
Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.

Oh yeah?


The sun is just a large nuclear reactor.

What I have
~4100
~1660

Westwood lives in death!
Peace through power!

A longbeard when it comes to Necrons and WHFB. Grumble Grumble

 
   
Made in gb
Renegade Inquisitor de Marche






Elephant Graveyard

 CthuluIsSpy wrote:
 purplefood wrote:
 Soladrin wrote:
Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.

Oh yeah?


The sun is just a large nuclear reactor.

Yeah and we use them to kill people...

Dakka Bingo! By Ouze
"You are the best at flying things"-Kanluwen
"Further proof that Purple is a fething brilliant super villain " -KingCracker
"Purp.. Im pretty sure I have a gun than can reach you...."-Nicorex
"That's not really an apocalypse. That's just Europe."-Grakmar
"almost as good as winning free cake at the tea drinking contest for an Englishman." -Reds8n
Seal up your lips and give no words but mum.
Equip, Reload. Do violence.
Watch for Gerry. 
   
Made in fr
Trazyn's Museum Curator





on the forum. Obviously

Ah, but the sun kills people as well. Just slower.

What I have
~4100
~1660

Westwood lives in death!
Peace through power!

A longbeard when it comes to Necrons and WHFB. Grumble Grumble

 
   
Made in nl
Decrepit Dakkanaut






 CthuluIsSpy wrote:
Ah, but the sun kills people as well. Just slower.


Mother nature has more reactors then us and I'm pretty sure her kill count is somewhat higher then ours.

Also, our nukes are puny toys compared to a single astaroid.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/09/16 12:41:36


 
   
Made in fr
Trazyn's Museum Curator





on the forum. Obviously

 Soladrin wrote:
 CthuluIsSpy wrote:
Ah, but the sun kills people as well. Just slower.


Mother nature has more reactors then us and I'm pretty sure her kill count is somewhat higher then ours.

Also, our nukes are puny toys compared to a single astaroid.


Oh yeah, asteroids are scary. Has a very small chance of actually hitting us, but if one of significant size does actually hit it could be unpleasant.

What I have
~4100
~1660

Westwood lives in death!
Peace through power!

A longbeard when it comes to Necrons and WHFB. Grumble Grumble

 
   
Made in us
Hallowed Canoness





The Void

I dunno why we're talking scary when this is just intensely awesome.

I beg of you sarge let me lead the charge when the battle lines are drawn
Lemme at least leave a good hoof beat they'll remember loud and long


SoB, IG, SM, SW, Nec, Cus, Tau, FoW Germans, Team Yankee Marines, Battletech Clan Wolf, Mercs
DR:90-SG+M+B+I+Pw40k12+ID+++A+++/are/WD-R+++T(S)DM+ 
   
Made in ca
Shas'ui with Bonding Knife





Toronto, Canada

Naychuh finds crazy ways to kill stuff regardless of thermonuclear splosions.

But the steampunk bugs are cool.

   
Made in us
Blood Angel Captain Wracked with Visions






 purplefood wrote:
 Soladrin wrote:
Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.

Oh yeah?
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/79/Operation_Upshot-Knothole_-_Badger_001.jpg

Mother Nature's mass extinction events over the last several billion years still have us beat

 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

 purplefood wrote:
 Soladrin wrote:
Read this just before you posted it on another news site.

Once again Mother nature showing us she's better at everything.

Oh yeah?


Mother nature trumps you with the good old supernova, sorry.



"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in gb
Highlord with a Blackstone Fortress






Adrift within the vortex of my imagination.

Dont even have to resort to a nova, an asteroid will do.

n'oublie jamais - It appears I now have to highlight this again.

It is by tea alone I set my mind in motion. By the juice of the brew my thoughts aquire speed, my mind becomes strained, the strain becomes a warning. It is by tea alone I set my mind in motion. 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

Thinking along the lines of a giant nuclear explosion. Mother nature wins by magnitudes that are hard to even comprehend.



"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in au
The Dread Evil Lord Varlak





Thanks for sharing that story KingCracker. Just incredible

“We may observe that the government in a civilized country is much more expensive than in a barbarous one; and when we say that one government is more expensive than another, it is the same as if we said that that one country is farther advanced in improvement than another. To say that the government is expensive and the people not oppressed is to say that the people are rich.”

Adam Smith, who must have been some kind of leftie or something. 
   
Made in us
Zealous Sin-Eater



Chico, CA

Don't even need an asteroid. Volcanoes make Nukes look like toys.

Peter: As we all know, Christmas is that mystical time of year when the ghost of Jesus rises from the grave to feast on the flesh of the living! So we all sing Christmas Carols to lull him back to sleep.
Bob: Outrageous, How dare he say such blasphemy. I've got to do something.
Man #1: Bob, there's nothing you can do.
Bob: Well, I guess I'll just have to develop a sense of humor.  
   
Made in us
5th God of Chaos! (Yea'rly!)




The Great State of Texas

 Orlanth wrote:
Dont even have to resort to a nova, an asteroid will do.


Nothing say loving like mass drivers.

-"Wait a minute.....who is that Frazz is talking to in the gallery? Hmmm something is going on here.....Oh.... it seems there is some dispute over video taping of some sort......Frazz is really upset now..........wait a minute......whats he go there.......is it? Can it be?....Frazz has just unleashed his hidden weiner dog from his mini bag, while quoting shakespeares "Let slip the dogs the war!!" GG
-"Don't mind Frazzled. He's just Dakka's crazy old dude locked in the attic. He's harmless. Mostly."
-TBone the Magnificent 1999-2014, Long Live the King!
 
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Leerstetten, Germany

Mother Nature kicks our butts on a regular basis with the flu.

It doesn't even need a cool explosion to kill us.
   
Made in ca
Zealous Sin-Eater




Montreal

Now that is truly epic. No wonder teleology is such a hard habit to fight.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/09/18 00:45:55


[...] for conflict is the great teacher, and pain, the perfect educator.  
   
Made in gb
Worthiest of Warlock Engineers






preston

Nice. Just goes to prove that nothing is new to nature

Free from GW's tyranny and the hobby is looking better for it
DR:90-S++G+++M++B++I+Pww205++D++A+++/sWD146R++T(T)D+
 
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






Burtucky, Michigan

Oh OT, you so crazy. Half this thread is on topic, the other half is killing the earth
   
Made in jp
[MOD]
Anti-piracy Officer






Somewhere in south-central England.

Here is a tool for calculating the effects of an asteroid impact on Earth.

http://impact.ese.ic.ac.uk/ImpactEffects/

I'm writing a load of fiction. My latest story starts here... This is the index of all the stories...

We're not very big on official rules. Rules lead to people looking for loopholes. What's here is about it. 
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut





Spitsbergen

 Kovnik Obama wrote:
Now that it truly epic. No wonder teleology is such a hard habit to fight.


   
Made in us
Infiltrating Broodlord





United States

Why do people insist on dividing nature from humanity? These are one in the same. A car is as natural as a flower.

Ayn Rand "We can evade reality, but we cannot evade the consequences of evading reality" 
   
Made in ca
Zealous Sin-Eater




Montreal

 BuFFo wrote:
Why do people insist on dividing nature from humanity? These are one in the same. A car is as natural as a flower.


(ಠ_ಠ)
.
.
.
(ಥ_ಥ)

[...] for conflict is the great teacher, and pain, the perfect educator.  
   
Made in us
Legendary Master of the Chapter





Chicago, Illinois

 Kovnik Obama wrote:
 BuFFo wrote:
Why do people insist on dividing nature from humanity? These are one in the same. A car is as natural as a flower.


(ಠ_ಠ)
.
.
.
(ಥ_ಥ)

It is all natural elements.


Wait a second....

From whom are unforgiven we bring the mercy of war. 
   
 
Forum Index » Off-Topic Forum
Go to: