Nanobes - Life may be smaller than you think
kris writes "The existence of nano-sized organisms has been proposed for a number of years by geologists who refer to a range of mineralised structures in rocks as the fossil remnants of nanobacteria. Bacteria range in size from 150nm (Mycoplasmas)-50m in diameter while the proposed nanobacteria are an order of magnitude smaller with diameters reported to range from 20nm-150nm. How small can life be? See for yourself at the Nanoworld Image gallery. Can we build computers from microbes and nanobes? Or has this already happened in precambrian times?
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Seriously, I think this would deserve index.pl!
Anyway, here's what troubles me. The largest atoms are about what, 10^-11m, right? So one of these thingies would be merely 2000 to 15000 atoms in length - about the length of some common complex organic molecules. How can a structure be so small and still qualify as alive?
Of course, if it can, that means that we can also build artificial assemblers at least that small. That's very cool.
To the editors: your English is as bad as your Perl. Please go back to grade school.