Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Natural resonance of material and the beating heart, are they linked to the start of life.?

Just thinking out loud here.


I understand that all materials have a natural resonance.


This is a specific vibration according to material and shape.





Heart tissue pulses on a regular basis, but changes to meet our activity etc.





But in a petri dish is pulses in a regular manner.





Is this linked to Natural resonance in any way, maybe for carbon.





Single cell things dont have a heart, but do they resonanate or pulse?





and finally is there any link to resonance and DNA.

Natural resonance of material and the beating heart, are they linked to the start of life.?
i dont know what youre getting at with this natural resonance thing, i think youre mixing two ideas that ought not to be mixed. the spontaneity of heartbeats comes from an electrical impulse center on the heart called the sinoatrial node. this node naturally fires impulses about 100 times a minute. the cause for this firing has to do with some concepts known as action potentials and absolute refractory periods.





the cells that normally utilize these action potentials are neurons. the neuron actively expends energy to create a separation of two ions (Na+ and K+) across the cell's membrane. This separation sets up an electrochemical gradient that is sensitive to being 'triggered' and causing those ions to flood back across the membrane to a resting position. if the cell didnt expend more energy to separate the ions again, they would remain in this resting position. this is how nervous messages are conducted, with those depolarization of ions causing a chain of depolarizations all the way down a neuron and eventually (through a slightly different process) to other neurons.


the heart cells in the sinoatrial node undergo a similar process, but they have a slight difference. instead of waiting for some sort of signal to set off the depolarization, they are constantly trying to depolarize due to the nature of the cell membrane (additional ion pores and what not, bit more complex.) problem is, they can only depolarize at a given pace due to the term i used earlier, the absolute refractory period. after a depolarization, it takes time for the cell to return to a point where it has the potential to depolarize again. if the SA node does this as fast as it can, its about 100 beats a minute. your heart only beats about 70 beats a minute due to innervations from the brain that control the rate of depolarization in order to maintain a steady heart rate.


if this is what you meant by natural resonance, then sure, why not.





as for dna, im not sure what youre question means.
Reply:try The ATOM and its electrons.


u will be understanding the meaning of all.
Reply:There are several different kinds of resonance; one, is the resonance where radio waves will resonate with a tune circuit to create oscillations at the natural resonate frequency of that tune circuit. Then there is resonance of other kinds of materials and shapes, things like cavities. This is different than radio frequency resonance. In the case of the resonance frequency of the heart, it is the natural resonance frequency (independent of shape and structure) of the atoms in the chemistry and tissues making up that particular organ, that is in question. In other words, if you were going to take a radio frequency source and tune into the resonant frequency of the heart, you would need to resonate at the natural frequency of the atoms and molecules in the biology of the heart tissue itself, a quantum effect. This would be a very, very high radio frequency.
Reply:there,s movement in everthing right down to the sub-atomic level


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