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How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation - Audio

How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation - Audio

Released: 2009-06-24
© 2020 University College London
How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation - Audio - QR Code
1 Episode
Audio
Listen on Apple Podcasts
1 Episode
Audio
Listen on Apple Podcasts
Released: 2009-06-24
© 2020 University College London
Most Recent Episode
How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation

How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation

Dr Andrea Sella
Time: 33:08
To a chemist, one of the many intriguing features of biology is the exquisite ability of biological systems to control pattern formation – from the stripes on the side of a zebra to the feathers of birds – and the extraordinary silicate architectures of diatoms, biological systems display spectacular examples of structural control across a wide range of scales. To do this, organisms have harnessed chemical processes in a remarkable way. In this lecture, Dr Sella uses a number of chemical reactions to illustrate these ideas. If all goes well, we may even bring an inorganic system to life. No mention will be made of the periodic table and no chemical background is necessary.
Lecture given on 29 November 2007.
Episode ID: 1000483788929
GUID: How the Zebra Got Its stripes – Getting to the heart of Pattern Formation - Wed, 24 Jun 2009 16:14:00 +0100
Release Date: 24/06/2009, 20:44:00

Description

To a chemist, one of the many intriguing features of biology is the exquisite ability of biological systems to control pattern formation – from the stripes on the side of a zebra to the feathers of birds – and the extraordinary silicate architectures of diatoms, biological systems display spectacular examples of structural control across a wide range of scales. To do this, organisms have harnessed chemical processes in a remarkable way. In this lecture, Dr Sella uses a number of chemical reactions to illustrate these ideas. If all goes well, we may even bring an inorganic system to life. No mention will be made of the periodic table and no chemical background is necessary.
Lecture given on 29 November 2007.

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