U.S. scientists develop plants that can detect bombs. How, they "teach" the plant proteins to change color when a certain chemical element. Application of research results is not difficult, for example, plants that can be used wrapped around the security gates. When the terrorists with explosives approached, all the plants change color to white.
Plants that work because the receptor protein in the DNA of plants naturally respond to stimulus threat by releasing chemicals called terpenoids to thicken the epidermis of leaves, the result leaves change color. The research was undertaken by the University of Colorado biology professor, June Medford joint headquarters U.S. armed forces, the Pentagon. "Plants can not run or hide from threats, so they developed a sophisticated system to detect and respond to their environment," said professor Medford.
The researchers designed a computer program to manipulate the plant's natural defense mechanism to "teach" its receptors respond to chemical explosives as well as air pollutants and water pollutants. Receptors redesigned computer is modified in order to function in plant cell walls so that they could identify pollutants or explosives in the air or the ground nearby. Plants that detect compounds and activate the internal signals that cause the loss of green color and turn it into white foliage.
The ability to detect than a similar plant is even better than dogs. The nature of detection could be used for any plant and can detect multiple pollutants at once. Professor Medford and his team recently received a three-year grant worth 7.9 million dollars from the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency to bring their discoveries to the "real world." The study appears in the journal PLoS ONE.
Plants that work because the receptor protein in the DNA of plants naturally respond to stimulus threat by releasing chemicals called terpenoids to thicken the epidermis of leaves, the result leaves change color. The research was undertaken by the University of Colorado biology professor, June Medford joint headquarters U.S. armed forces, the Pentagon. "Plants can not run or hide from threats, so they developed a sophisticated system to detect and respond to their environment," said professor Medford.
The researchers designed a computer program to manipulate the plant's natural defense mechanism to "teach" its receptors respond to chemical explosives as well as air pollutants and water pollutants. Receptors redesigned computer is modified in order to function in plant cell walls so that they could identify pollutants or explosives in the air or the ground nearby. Plants that detect compounds and activate the internal signals that cause the loss of green color and turn it into white foliage.
The ability to detect than a similar plant is even better than dogs. The nature of detection could be used for any plant and can detect multiple pollutants at once. Professor Medford and his team recently received a three-year grant worth 7.9 million dollars from the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency to bring their discoveries to the "real world." The study appears in the journal PLoS ONE.
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Bomb detector ADE 651 is produced by the company ATSC LTD.
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