10cm long and living in the ocean, this creature can change the world
Experts believe that this creature will "teach" people a lot of groundbreaking knowledge, which contains a huge technological potential.
In the animal world, many species deserve to be considered "superheroes" because of their special abilities.
There are even species that carry the ability to change this world, as the animals we will mention below.
They have a great pair of eyes, feel almost all colors in the world, and see light waves that very few species can. They hold a variety of biological records, as opposed to trivial looks.
The organism is the head shrimp - the mantis shrimp.
Shrimp.
Calling trivial appearance is not wrong, because we only know this creature on . drinking table. There are things to the scientific world, they are the most petty creatures because of their special abilities.
And now, scientists are planning to take advantage of those special abilities to help people.
The application will cover many areas, from making armor to soldiers, to methods of determining cancer in the shortest time.
Shrimp head - creature with the most special abilities Earth and application for humans
The theory behind the research called " biomimetic " means that we will rely on nature to improve people's lives and conditions.
We used this method with the ability of jellyfish to move, the way the butterfly flapped its wings, or the ability of the giant squid to hunt. And now it's shrimp turn.
Shrimp headlines have extremely special abilities.
David Kisailus, a professor of engineering science at the University of California, Riverside is one of the pioneers in researching shrimps. In 2012, he realized this shrimp has a spiral body structure . As a result, they absorb 50,000 vibrations from dangerous waves, with an acceleration equivalent to a 0.22 millimeter bullet.
Kisailus said that just by reproducing the body structure of the head shrimps, we could create a revolutionary bulletproof vest for the military and the police. Even that structure can be more efficient than many of the current bulletproof materials, including bulletproof covers for US presidential vehicles.
With terrible eyesight, head shrimp can make a breakthrough, helping people achieve the vision of superheroes. In a study by the University of Queensland (Australia) in 2012, head shrimps had up to 12 cones (sensory receptors), while in humans only 3. Thus, they perceived the amount of color. much bigger than us, and the ability to handle colors is also extremely fast.
Shrimp head has a spiral body structure.
And yet, as stated, head shrimps can sense many different types of light waves. They convert the kind of light waves that ordinary animals cannot see into something that can be observed.
This means the animal itself is a "supermarket" lens (hyperspectral optic) - something that humans have been pursuing for a long time.
Finally, there is also the most potential application of headline shrimps, which is the ability to detect cancer from the very early age.
According to Viktor Gruev from Marshall and Washington University (USA), we can simulate the ability to analyze the light of a shrimp head to do this. Even people can integrate it into the phone camera, and it can be said that cancer will only be a disease of the past.
Who would believe this animal holds so much technological potential.
But of course, the technologies we mentioned above are still in pregnancy, and may never come true. All right for the future to answer, but according to experts from MIT, these are both great and potential ideas.
- Discover the mysterious creature in the deepest area of the Indian Ocean
- How long does it take to live long in the universe?
- The fantasy world under the icy ocean
- Discovered a new species of
- The cause of sea water warming up
- 10cm shrimp pushes 90kg heavy objects
- The deepest fish in the world
- Dogs 'myths' in world history
- The oldest living creatures still exist on Earth
- The world's oldest creature
- 20 meter long shark extinct because of climate change
- The 5 oldest creatures on Earth