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- Newsgroups: sci.cryonics
- Path: sparky!uunet!shearson.com!snark!pmetzger
- From: pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger)
- Subject: Re: Ice crystal damage
- Message-ID: <1992Jul21.145302.726@shearson.com>
- Sender: news@shearson.com (News)
- Organization: /usr/local/lib/news/organization
- References: <1992Jul16.132605.10591@hellgate.utah.edu> <1992Jul17.133023.21241@shearson.com> <1992Jul20.182125.1855@hellgate.utah.edu>
- Date: Tue, 21 Jul 1992 14:53:02 GMT
- Lines: 111
-
- In article <1992Jul20.182125.1855@hellgate.utah.edu> tolman%asylum.cs.utah.edu@cs.utah.edu (Kenneth Tolman) writes:
- >This is wrong. There are enzymes used by organisms to mitigate
- >ice crystal damage. Your "vital structures" are ONLY made up of enzymes.
- >Of course, you would wish to introduce non harmful enzymes.
-
- My vital structures are made up of protein complexes, not enzymes.
- Enzymes are peptides and proteins in the body used to catalyze
- reactions. They are not structural.
-
- >>> As I implied in another posting- the best form of cryoprotectant would be
- >>>enzymes produced by ones OWN cells.
- >>
- >>There is no mechanism I can think of that would allow enzymes per se
- >>to act as cryoprotectants. Cryoprotectants tend to be things like
- >>glycerol that don't freeze well and inhibit water from freezing, too.
- >
- >I hate to say it, but at liquid nitrogen tempratures you are going to
- >be frozen solid. The water won't be inhibited from freezing at that
- >temperature- it will be rock solid
-
- You don't understand the difference between freezing and immobility.
- Glass is NOT a frozen substance; it does not have an aligned
- crystaline structure. Similarly, the goal is not to freeze patients,
- but to vitrify them: to make them into glassy, rather than crystaline,
- solids.
-
- >>>That is, one would have a slight
- >>>genetic engineering to produce the enzyme which would exist within you
- >>>during your whole life, and when it came time for suspension they would
- >>>maybe only have to do a few minor operations. There would be no chemical
- >>>trauma whatsoever......
- >
- >>What good would this do for existing patients?
- >
- >Say what? The future patients may care about their own suspensions. I
- >would rather live than die.
-
- Non sequitur. You obviously aren't going to be genetically
- re-engineered any time soon, so this isn't an existing option for you,
- is it.
-
- >>>To achieve this it would probably
- >>>require some sort of microwave like device for cooling things quickly.
- >
- >>How could you manage that? Microwaves heat things by being absorbed by
- >>them. Generally speaking, there is no way to stimulate an object to
- >>spontaneously emit radiation in such a way as to make it cooler than
- >>its immediate surroundings. I haven't thought of it deeply, and there
- >>might be some way that one could manage to get an object to emit
- >>more radiation than it absorbs using some trick, but I don't know of
- >>one.
- >
- >There IS a common way to get an object to spontaneously emit. It is
- >known as a "laser". There are also techniques for "capturing" molecules
- >with e-m frequencies inducing the target to "behave".
-
- Yes. Lasers, however, work by first pumping up an electron to a higher
- energy state, and then getting it to spontaneously emit. You can't
- cool something by making it lase; in fact, lasers heat up fairly well.
- Although you can use lasers to capture and manipulate individual
- molecules, the technique could not work on bulk matter, so again, this
- isn't practical.
-
- >>I suggest you read up on the
- >>state of the art before suggesting something like soap or "microwave
- >>cooling".
- >
- >I suggest you learn some basic science, before being so critical.
-
- I seem to know mine, and you don't seem to know yours. Why tell me to
- learn mine?
-
- >In all,
- >your comments are very negative and promote the inhibition of ideas.
- >You sound very much like someone who has given up on innovation, when
- >you say "before suggesting.. microwave cooling". If that had been said
- >of "microwave heating" the person would look like a downright fool.
-
- Well, thats because its obvious how you get microwaves or any other
- form of radiation to heat something. Microwave ovens aren't any
- different in principle from the way you cook in a solar oven; you are
- taking electromagnetic radiation, and focusing it on something that by
- absorbing the radiation heats up. Microwaves are penetrating, which
- makes them more interesting, but not especially different. However,
- "microwave cooling" is not something with a precedent, and you
- presented, and still present, no plausible mechanism by which it might
- work. Thats a big difference right there.
-
- >I would suggest you refrain from being overly critical. It does not aid
- >anything, it simply dampens discussion and understanding for all.
-
- Being very critical is important here. Cryonics sounds so fantastic
- that proponents of pseudoscience flock to it and spout mock science.
- It is important not to let such ideas propagate because they might get
- associated with cryonics itself, which is very serious and has serious
- scientific evidence for it. This is much like Drexler's comment
- concerning the accumulation of foolishness in conjunction with
- nanotechnology.
-
- >Quick denial and oppression are sure ways to cut off all future
- >progress.
-
- I'm not oppressing you. I'm asking for evidence of fantastic ideas,
- like "microwave cooling". If you HAVE evidence for them, you can just
- present it and I'll shut up.
-
- --
- Perry Metzger pmetzger@shearson.com
- --
- Just say "NO!" to death and taxes.
- Extropian and Proud.
-