Saturday 27th of April 2024
|
|
|
Headlines : * Myanmar warlord at centre of battle for key border town   * Two dead as trucks crash in Dinajpur’s Ghoraghat   * Five killed in Manikganj, Gazipur, Dinajpur road crashes   * PM Hasina opens bilateral meeting with Thai premier Thavisin   * Dhaka denounces US State Department`s 2023 human rights report   * PM pays courtesy call on Thai King & Queen   * PM urges world leaders to say `no` to wars   * Heat wave sweeping across the country, may continue   * Secondary schools, colleges to open Sunday   * 155 killed in Tanzania as heavy rains cause floods, landslides  

   Features
Singapore researchers control Venus flytraps using smartphones
  Date : 27-04-2024

Online Desk : Researchers in Singapore have found a way of controlling a Venus flytrap using electric signals from a smartphone, an innovation they hope will have a range of uses from robotics to employing the plants as environmental sensors.

Luo Yifei, a researcher at Singapore`s Nanyang Technological University (NTU), showed in a demonstration how a signal from a smartphone app sent to tiny electrodes attached to the plant could make its trap close as it does when catching a fly.

"Plants are like humans, they generate electric signals, like the ECG (electrocardiogram) from our hearts," said Luo, who works at NTU`s School of Materials Science and Engineering.

"We developed a non-invasive technology to detect these electric signals from the surface of plants without damaging them," Luo said.

The scientists have also detached the trap portion of the Venus flytrap and attached it to a robotic arm so it can, when given a signal, grip something thin and light like a piece of wire.

In this way, the plant could be used as a "soft robot", the scientists say, to pick up fragile things that might be damaged by industrial grippers, as well as being more environmentally friendly.

Communication between humans and plants is not necessarily entirely one-way.

The NTU research team hopes their technology can be used to detect signals from plants about abnormalities or potential diseases before full-blown symptoms appear.

"We are exploring using plants as living sensors to monitor environmental pollution like gas, toxic gas, or water pollution," said Luo, who stressed there was a long way to go before such plant technology could be used commercially.

But for Darren Ng, an enthusiast of the carnivorous plants and founder of SG VenusFlytrap, a group that sells the plants and offers care tips, the research is welcome.

"If the plant can talk back to us, maybe growing all these plants may be even easier," he says.



  
  সর্বশেষ
PM ask AL men to work for country, its people
Chuadanga records highest temperature of 42.7C
Bangladesh, Thailand sign five documents
Dhaka, Thailand has scopes to boost cooperation in many fields: PM

Chief Advisor: Md. Tajul Islam,
Editor & Publisher Fatima Islam Tania and Printed from Bismillah Printing Press,
219, Fakirapul, Dhaka-1000.
Editorial Office: 167 Eden Complex, Motijheel, Dhaka-1000.
Phone: 02-224401310, Mobile: 01720090514, E-mail: muslimtimes19@gmail.com