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Testing Prospects for Reliable Diatom Nanotechnology in MicrogravityThe worldwide effort to grow nanotechnology, rather than use lithography, focuses on diatoms, single cell eukaryotic algae with ornate silica shells, which can be replaced by oxides and ceramics, or reduced to elemental silicon, to create complex nanostructures with compositions of industrial and electronics importance. Diatoms produce an enormous variety of structures, some of which are microtubule dependent and perhaps sensitive to microgravity. The NASA Single Loop for Cell Culture (SLCC) for culturing and observing microorganisms permits inexpensive, low labor in-space experiments. We propose to send up to the International Space Station diatom cultures of the three diatom species whose genomes are being sequenced, plus the giant diatoms of Antarctica (up to 2 mm diameter for a single cell) and the unique colonial diatom, Bacillaria paradoxa. Bacillaria cells move against each other in partial synchrony, like a sliding deck of cards, by a microfluidics mechanism. Will normal diatoms have aberrant pattern and shape or motility compared to ground controls? The generation time is typically one day, so that many generations may be examined from one flight. Rapid, directed evolution may be possible running the SLCC as a compustat. The shell shapes and patterns are preserved in hard silica, so that the progress of normal and aberrant morphogenesis may be followed by drying samples on a moving filter paper "diatom tape recorder". With a biodiversity of 100,000 distinct species, diatom nanotechnology may offer a compact and portable nanotechnology toolkit for exploration anywhere.
Document ID
20070039073
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Gordon, Richard
(Manitoba Univ. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada)
Hoover, Richard B.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Tuszynski, Jack A.
(Alberta Univ. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
deLuis, Javier
(Payload Systems, Inc. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Camp, Philip J.
(Edinburgh Univ. United Kingdom)
Tiffany, Mary Ann
(San Diego State Univ. San Diego, CA, United States)
Nagy, Stephen S.
(Veterans Administration Hospital Fort Harrison, MT, United States)
Lerner, Beatriz E.
(Manitoba Univ. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
August 26, 2007
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Meeting Information
Meeting: SPIE Optics and Photonics: Optical Engineering and Application
Location: San Diego, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: August 26, 2007
End Date: August 30, 2007
Sponsors: International Society for Optical Engineering
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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