Blog 4 – Friday Group X

I found out today that almost all nanotechnology possibilities are related to medicine. Interestingly, there are other ways to implement nanotechnology even though they seem to be computerized for only one reason: to heal the human body when it is in trouble. They can theoretically live in the lungs and help electrolyze water into hydrogen and oxygen gas (not a good idea because hydrogen gas is highly flammable) or attempt to cure hemophilia by producing the coagulase necessary to produce blood clots. Also a way to inhibit clots is to have a leech, which produces an anticoagulant that stops the blood from clotting, and it also short circuits the nerves, causing it to be impossible to notice the leech.

Interestingly, science as a whole also relates to art, even though some teachers think otherwise, and sometimes artists decide to go into science. I was very inspired by the lecture today about how frustrated artists are that everything has already been done, and sometimes it is better to think of inventions and make them into art-like materials that function by principles of DeMoivre’s Theorem and the Henderson Hasselbach Equation, which indicates that the pH is almost always close to the pKa, which is the negative common logarithm of the ionization constant of an acid. This is because it is advantageous for a buffer to have an equivalence point pH near seven, so it is difficult to change the pH. Mood swings can also be caused by irritating sounds caused by implemented shadows made by scientific terms.

http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1279226

http://www.billbuxton.com/artistRole.html

http://vv.arts.ucla.edu/publications/reviews/02-03/Chemistry/SciArt.pdf

http://mh.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/35/1/55

http://www.digitalartguild.com/content/view/26/26/

This entry was posted in Student Blogs Group X. Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.