real organitech?

10101010: Site is secure. Move on to the next, secure and deactivate. Await further orders from Swarmlord.
2009: Let the Hunt Begin.

Moderators: Immortals, Supreme Beings, Old Ones

User avatar
glitterboy2098
Rifts® Trivia Master
Posts: 13547
Joined: Wed Aug 06, 2003 3:37 pm
Location: Missouri
Contact:

real organitech?

Unread post by glitterboy2098 »

they've been discussing this over in the robotech section.


first step to organitech?

DARPA: Planes = Plants?

The Pentagon wants planes to start acting more like plants. That's the ultimate goal of a research project, funded by Darpa, the Defense Department's mad science division.

We all know plants change their shape. Some bend to catch the sun's rays; some snap to catch a meaty treat; some stiffen when they're watered. Darpa would like to have tough, man-made materials that can pull off some of the same tricks. Maybe, one day, it can lead to a jet that can pull back its wings when it's ready to attack, or extend 'em to glide.

Researchers at Virginia Tech have won from Darpa a $2.1 million, year-and-half grant to start to figure out ways to do this. "The plan calls for the investigation of the protein structures of plants for the purpose of understanding their role in generating shape changes in natural materials," says a Virginia Tech press release. "The protein structures under analysis would then be used to develop a synthetic material that incorporates properties that produce controllable shapes."

The project – Nastic Materials -- is part of a whole range of efforts by Darpa to make materials that act a little like living things. As John Main, the program's manager, said at a DarpaTech conference earlier this year:

The intersection of materials science and nature appears to show great promise for delivering materials with unobtainable properties.
Natural materials are truly magnificent: Living bones grow, repair damage, remodel to distribute stress, and produce blood. Muscle turns lipids into work to help us regulate body temperature, maintain balance, and walk. Plant tissues grow, distribute nutrients, isolate injury, self-clean, support leaves, and sometimes even move with surprising force, such as tree roots upending concrete sidewalks.

All of these characteristics are unobtainable [in man-made things] if you limit yourself to the world of conventional materials. Yet they are all clearly possible, because nature has supplied us with examples to study and potential paths to follow to create similar capabilities.
Author of Rifts: Deep Frontier (Rifter 70)
Author of Rifts:Scandinavia (current project)
Image
* All fantasy should have a solid base in reality.
* Good sense about trivialities is better than nonsense about things that matter.

-Max Beerbohm
Visit my Website
Mike Taylor

Unread post by Mike Taylor »

Very interesting, have you posted this in the Splicers forum?
User avatar
glitterboy2098
Rifts® Trivia Master
Posts: 13547
Joined: Wed Aug 06, 2003 3:37 pm
Location: Missouri
Contact:

Unread post by glitterboy2098 »

nope. i don't have that book yet, and i don't want to become involved in that forum until i have an understanding of what the heck everyone is talking about.
Author of Rifts: Deep Frontier (Rifter 70)
Author of Rifts:Scandinavia (current project)
Image
* All fantasy should have a solid base in reality.
* Good sense about trivialities is better than nonsense about things that matter.

-Max Beerbohm
Visit my Website
Mike Taylor

Unread post by Mike Taylor »

I think it would still be an interesting addition and would probably get more attention over there. :)
User avatar
maasenstodt
Adventurer
Posts: 412
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 11:52 pm
Location: The Gateway City

Unread post by maasenstodt »

As for that tank, I'll post it here if you want.

Let's see it! :)
Mike Taylor

Unread post by Mike Taylor »

By all means, we need new material here.
Locked

Return to “Systems Failure™”