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Quantum Phenomena of Photosynthesis |
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| Dec19-11, 09:14 PM | #1 |
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Quantum Phenomena of Photosynthesis
Can someone confirm this as true or as crank-science. I tried looking for any publication of this but haven't found anything.
"They were trying to establish exactly how organic photosynthesis approaches 95% efficiency, whereas the most sophisticated human solar cells operate at only half that. What they discovered is nothing short of remarkable. Using femtosecond lasers to follow the movement of light energy through a photosynthetic bacterial cell, Engel et al. observed the energy traveling along every possible direction at the same time." |
| Dec19-11, 09:47 PM | #2 |
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They are likely referring to work published a few years ago that was published here:
"Evidence for wavelike energy transfer through quantum coherence in photosynthetic systems." The issue - IMO - is not the science which is rather interesting and reasonable, but rather some people's usage of said science to support rather idiosyncratic notions (and that's being charitable). |
| Dec19-11, 10:25 PM | #4 |
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Quantum Phenomena of Photosynthesis |
| Dec19-11, 10:43 PM | #5 |
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I Googled a long enough fraction of that quote in your first post to sate my own curiosity out of interest. When I saw the phrase "quantum consciousness" on my screen, I immediately closed that tab in my browser. It may have been an excessive response, but I've been around the block often enough to be wary. ;)
The idea of "quantum biology" has been one that has cropped up on here before. Outside of cases like photosynthesis, certain enzymatic reactions which seem to utilize proton tunneling, and possibly a few other interesting scenarios, I don't see the urgency to directly appeal to quantum mechanics to explain things in biology - often, one can just draw upon chemistry and classical physics for answers. I suppose that one could split hairs and note that quantum chemical methods are necessary for computational studies of enzyme mechanisms, but that's the case for pure chemistry as well. |
| Dec19-11, 11:24 PM | #6 |
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Nature ran a recent news piece discussing a few examples of systems where quantum mechanical phenomena play important roles in biology (http://www.nature.com/news/2011/1106...l/474272a.html, subscription required). As Mike H said, these cases are limited to a few special cases of enzymes that utilize proton tunneling, Graham Flemming's work on quantum coherence in photosynthesis, and the mechanisms by which birds sense magnetic fields (see for example, http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.040503).
I also agree with Mike that attempts to invoke quantum effects to explain consciousness or other phenomena in neuroscience seem to be just a bunch of ********. Or at least no one has yet been able to show me any evidence to convince me otherwise. |
| Dec20-11, 12:06 AM | #7 |
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I've always felt like QC was an attempt to slay Laplace's demon.
It's unfortunate that it drives us to have to divide studies between classical and quantum physics. The border is a lot more fuzzy in biological systems than it is in cannonballs. |
| Dec20-11, 02:49 AM | #8 |
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| Dec20-11, 06:04 AM | #9 |
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There have been some excellent responses in this thread that I entirely agree with. There is a pervasive cult of pseudo-science around quantum effects in biology. Whilst we can't totally dismiss the role of quantum effects in the brain and neither can we dismiss their role in consciousness the fact remains that there is no good evidence to accept the hypothesis and some research to show that previous claims are flawed.
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| Dec20-11, 06:57 PM | #10 |
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Related to the paper I cited earlier - the protein they were examining (the Fenna-Matthews-Olsen protein from a green sulfur bacterium) is literally jam-packed with bacteriochlorophyll molecules (I think it's on the order of 20 such molecules per protein). It serves as a bridge for electron transfer from the light harvesting arrays to the photosynthetic reaction center. It's a very photochemically active and interesting system. If one were to find organized arrays of such molecules in other biological systems, I would imagine the argument for quantum effects in that system might be a bit easier. |
| Dec20-11, 07:24 PM | #11 |
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The chemical reactions themselves are not defined in classical mechanics. So if you want to model the system most generally, you have to mix chemistry and classical physics. I find chemistry to be too abstracted for quantitative modeling, personally. The stoichiometry and the geometry are presented as two independent concepts in a toolbag for patchwork investigation.
If you want a pure particle approach, you must define some kind of hybrid model that handle both electrodynamic particle configurations AND their reactions (meaning some allowance of QED). Not that have any idea of what that would like, but I guess I just feel there's a huge disconnect there. I guess the overall interest is really unification of chemistry and physics, rather than patchwork modelling. |
| Dec20-11, 08:59 PM | #12 |
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| Dec21-11, 02:42 PM | #13 |
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only the spurious claims of quantum consciousness are dismissed.
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| Dec21-11, 04:43 PM | #14 |
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I was just speaking in general, some do dismiss it or are reluctant to agree.
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| Dec21-11, 09:06 PM | #15 |
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It sounds as if you want to do something like Car and Parrinello did (their merger of DFT with MD), but more general. Which would certainly be something worth doing - although I also don't have any clue how that would actually manifest itself. |
| Aug2-12, 06:48 PM | #16 |
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It doesn't seem reasonable to dismiss quantum explanations for nature's efficiency.
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| Aug2-12, 07:14 PM | #17 |
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