Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2014 8:32 am
Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
This is perhaps a risky first post upon my acceptance to these forums, but I feel like this sub-category, which by the forum's own definition includes 'electricity of life,' is the best place to posit this idea. The overall issue of the electricity of life is IMO one of the most exciting yet deepest subjects for EU proponents to even begin exploring.
Before I share my simplistic thoughts a little background on myself. I'm a product designer by trade (i make stuff look nice, user friendly, and have good materials and colors like Jony Ive). I have very little rigorous scientific education apart from a few high school AP classes and only a single GE science class in university. Nevertheless, as a designer one of my strengths is visual intuition (love Bill Mullen's talk from EU 2013) and making connections between seemingly unrelated contexts. I definitely feel there is a lot more potential for visual connections, if only as a catalyst or jumping off point for actual experiment and conclusion.
The Idea to Explore:
How is fruit electrical?
What are the electrical properties, nature, and development of fruit growing on trees (IE an orange).
Connections I've made:
- Hexagonal structures in nature on all scales (molecules, beehives, crystals, Saturn, etc) - Fruit poles sometimes have a polygonal quality to them (Bananas, oranges, apples, Pineapple)
- Polar structure of fruit - most fruits have two poles, the stem-pole and the other pole. Are these in some way directly analogous to the detected hot and cold poles of planets and moons? The interior structure is also polar. While there are varieties of this theme it is fairly universal.
- The orange on my table has pores like the sun.
Thoughts?
Before I share my simplistic thoughts a little background on myself. I'm a product designer by trade (i make stuff look nice, user friendly, and have good materials and colors like Jony Ive). I have very little rigorous scientific education apart from a few high school AP classes and only a single GE science class in university. Nevertheless, as a designer one of my strengths is visual intuition (love Bill Mullen's talk from EU 2013) and making connections between seemingly unrelated contexts. I definitely feel there is a lot more potential for visual connections, if only as a catalyst or jumping off point for actual experiment and conclusion.
The Idea to Explore:
How is fruit electrical?
What are the electrical properties, nature, and development of fruit growing on trees (IE an orange).
Connections I've made:
- Hexagonal structures in nature on all scales (molecules, beehives, crystals, Saturn, etc) - Fruit poles sometimes have a polygonal quality to them (Bananas, oranges, apples, Pineapple)
- Polar structure of fruit - most fruits have two poles, the stem-pole and the other pole. Are these in some way directly analogous to the detected hot and cold poles of planets and moons? The interior structure is also polar. While there are varieties of this theme it is fairly universal.
- The orange on my table has pores like the sun.
Thoughts?
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- Posts: 3517
- Joined: Tue Jul 20, 2010 2:20 pm
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
"It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong."
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2014 8:32 am
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
And I completely forgot about that somehow...=)Sparky wrote:http://youtu.be/D23JH30ZMK0
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- Posts: 3517
- Joined: Tue Jul 20, 2010 2:20 pm
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2635006/
These propagating excitations are modeled theoretically as traveling wave solutions of certain parameter-dependent non-linear reaction-diffusion equations coupled with some non-linear ordinary differential equations.
"It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong."
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2014 8:32 am
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
I'm an industrial designer and frequent this popular design hub. Thought this was fun:
http://www.core77.com/blog/food/caleb_c ... 1.asp#more
http://www.core77.com/blog/food/caleb_c ... 1.asp#more
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- Posts: 3517
- Joined: Tue Jul 20, 2010 2:20 pm
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
We waste tons of citrus fruit. A bushel of lemons should power a electrolysis for HOH to burn as fuel .... Cheap gas....
"It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong."
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire
- D_Archer
- Posts: 1255
- Joined: Sat Apr 18, 2009 4:01 am
- Location: The Netherlands
Re: Electricity of Fruit? (and plants in general)
Study the chestnut, the shell protects the seed, the shell has spikes, it draws in energy in to power the seed. The seed needs that power to grow when it is in the soil. The energy connects to above and below, so the seed can grow a sprout and roots, trees are balanced with respect to the energy above and below the ground, they are like electrical antennea just like we humans are.CameronN wrote:This is perhaps a risky first post upon my acceptance to these forums, but I feel like this sub-category, which by the forum's own definition includes 'electricity of life,' is the best place to posit this idea. The overall issue of the electricity of life is IMO one of the most exciting yet deepest subjects for EU proponents to even begin exploring.
Before I share my simplistic thoughts a little background on myself. I'm a product designer by trade (i make stuff look nice, user friendly, and have good materials and colors like Jony Ive). I have very little rigorous scientific education apart from a few high school AP classes and only a single GE science class in university. Nevertheless, as a designer one of my strengths is visual intuition (love Bill Mullen's talk from EU 2013) and making connections between seemingly unrelated contexts. I definitely feel there is a lot more potential for visual connections, if only as a catalyst or jumping off point for actual experiment and conclusion.
The Idea to Explore:
How is fruit electrical?
What are the electrical properties, nature, and development of fruit growing on trees (IE an orange).
Connections I've made:
- Hexagonal structures in nature on all scales (molecules, beehives, crystals, Saturn, etc) - Fruit poles sometimes have a polygonal quality to them (Bananas, oranges, apples, Pineapple)
- Polar structure of fruit - most fruits have two poles, the stem-pole and the other pole. Are these in some way directly analogous to the detected hot and cold poles of planets and moons? The interior structure is also polar. While there are varieties of this theme it is fairly universal.
- The orange on my table has pores like the sun.
Thoughts?
The oak is holy, a big oak is holier, why? Because it has competed with all other seeds and the seed with the most power and the best place in the soil to grow wins out his peers, it grows on an energy grid focus point, allowing it to grow large.
Regards,
Daniel
- Shoot Forth Thunder -
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