Science, asked by sakshikhomane24, 5 months ago

the science behind our technology.

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Answers

Answered by Talentedgirl1
3

Answer:

Although the science behind our platform technology and intellectual property (IP) for creating and replicating stem cells in space is complex, the scientific basis underlying the technology can be easily understood. Since our initial commercial focus is on food and renewable energy crops, this overview will concentrate on plant stem cells and how growing them in space is vastly different from growing them on Earth.

In 4 billion years of life on Earth, almost everything about the environment has changed; however, there has always been ONE CONSTANT: All life on Earth has formed within the confines of 1G. To overcome gravity, about 50% of the energy expended by terrestrial-bound plants is dedicated to structural support. By removing gravity from the equation, plant cells in a weightless environment react to this relatively benign environmental change by going into survival mode. The excess of energy causes Differential Gene Expression, wherein normally dormant genes within the cell, often referred to as “junk DNA”, are able to express themselves. With these dormant genes now expressing, the plant is able to adapt quickly to a changing environment and specific stressors.

Answered by pragyarai1801
1

Explanation:

Science, technology and innovation each represent a successively larger category of activities which are highly interdependent but distinct. Science contributes to technology in at least six ways:

(1) new knowledge which serves as a direct source of ideas for new technological possibilities

(2) source of tools and techniques for more efficient engineering design and a knowledge base for evaluation of feasibility of designs

(3) research instrumentation, laboratory techniques and analytical methods used in research that eventually find their way into design or industrial practices, often through intermediate disciplines

(4) practice of research as a source for development and assimilation of new human skills and capabilities eventually useful for technology

(5) creation of a knowledge base that becomes increasingly important in the assessment of technology in terms of its wider social and environmental impacts (6) knowledge base that enables more efficient strategies of applied research, development, and refinement of new technologies.

The converse impact of technology on science is of at least equal importance:

(1) through providing a fertile source of novel scientific questions and thereby also helping to justify the allocation of resources needed to address these questions in an efficient and timely manner, extending the agenda of science

(2) as a source of otherwise unavailable instrumentation and techniques needed to address novel and more difficult scientific questions more efficiently.

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