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Tying Molecules In Knots

Med-trump writes "Scientists report that they have made a non-DNA molecular knot. They created a 160-atom-loop with five crossing points, a molecular pentafoil knot. The researchers used a technique known as 'self-assembly' to prepare the knot in a chemical reaction. Apparently 85% of the elasticity of natural rubber is due to knot-like entanglements in the rubber molecules' chains."

12 comments

  1. Re:first! by sexconker · · Score: 1

    first porst

    Yours was actually the second post.
    You got the first failure, though.

  2. Sweatpants by XCDBFPL · · Score: 0

    Sorry guys, I did this knot with my sweatpants drawstring like 6 months ago.

  3. Shoes by SJHillman · · Score: 1

    It took me long enough to learn how to tie my shoes. I hope this won't be on the final exam.

  4. Nice by sseymour1978 · · Score: 2

    How long until they can make sweater for some single cell organism and make its life more comfortable ?

    1. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How long they they can make a sweater FROM some single cell organism, and make OUR life more comfortable ;)

    2. Re:Nice by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      To be honest I thought that this was what GP said until I went back and read it a second time...

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
  5. protein knots by digitalderbs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually naturally-occuring protein knots have been known for some time now. See knots.mit.edu for example. This appears to be one of the first synthetic knots.

  6. "Why use quotes?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You do know that "self-assembly" isn't really a technique. That's like writing that Google updated their search algorithm using a technique known as "writing code". Self-assembly is just a term for things that assemble by themselves.

    1. Re:"Why use quotes?" by inputdev · · Score: 2

      It helps marketing identify 'buzzwords'