Conservation of mass and energy?

In summary: They also release energy that the cells use to grow. And, of course, the mass and energy of a human increases as we eat.
  • #1
physics noob
41
0
conservation of mass and energy?

ok... i get the principle, but what about birth? Meaning what about when someone is born, where is that mass coming from? Where is the energy coming from? The only thing i can think of is the nurishment the mom takes and gives to the baby, but how can that possibly equate to a human? More fundatmental a question i guess would be how does physics deal with growth in humans? i know this question may be off the wall, but, well, I am fairly odd, and I've been curious about this for a while... any comments?
 
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  • #2
The energy of the food is broken down and transferred to the child. The child's developping body then uses that energy to grow. This is of course, a very basic explanation.

The law of conservation of mass and energy states that both of these things can neither be created nor destroyed, only transferred. Do you see the transfer?
 
  • #3
A human does not have to conserve mass and energy, you eat. When more energy goes in than out, you grow bigger. Food is broken down and taken up from the bowel, it then circulates the blood; the fetus can take nutrients from the mother's blood and uses it to grow. Just remember that the blood circulation of the mother and fetus are not shared, there is a membrane barrier through which nutrients diffuse.
 
  • #4
Monique said:
A human does not have to conserve mass and energy, you eat.

surely you don't mean that mass/energy is not conserved in biology?

thermodynamically, energy is conserved. the energy that you gain through feeding contributes to maintaining the negative entropy of the being. this negative entropy represents the highly-ordered state of a living system. if this were not the case, there would be no reason to feed - simply exchanging "atom for atom" does nothing. this thermodynamic process is not completely efficient though, so heat is also given off.
 
  • #5
quetzalcoatl9 said:
surely you don't mean that mass/energy is not conserved in biology?
I knew someone would fall over that comment. Sure mass/energy is conserved. I meant to say that the mass/energy of a human increases as we eat, it is not static. A baby does not come out of nothing, it feeds on the nutrition that the mother provides.
 
  • #6
In other words a human - or any live organism - is an open system, irretrievably linked to its environment and hence not a conservative system. Its entropy doesn't have to increase either; it can offload the increase to its environment, providing it can acquire some free energy, relative to that environment.

Because all organisms try to sequester free energy, the best source of free energy is other organisms. Hence Original Sin.
 
  • #7
this is the way you become immortal, forever insure that you receive more than you give, recycle your own wastes(technically), cover all the letters in MRS. GREN... death is impractical, far more than birth, i suppose it is similar to cryogenic freezing...

while an open system gives way for others to use the energy you once used, a closed system ensures that you allways receive the correct amount of energy...
 
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  • #8
hexhunter said:
this is the way you become immortal, forever insure that you receive more than you give, recycle your own wastes(technically), cover all the letters in MRS. GREN... death is impractical, far more than birth, i suppose it is similar to cryogenic freezing...

while an open system gives way for others to use the energy you once used, a closed system ensures that you allways receive the correct amount of energy...

oh ok. now i understand how to be immortal.

and to think it was right under my nose all this time!

i have no idea what you just said
 
  • #9
hexhunter said:
this is the way you become immortal, forever insure that you receive more than you give, recycle your own wastes(technically), cover all the letters in MRS. GREN... death is impractical, far more than birth, i suppose it is similar to cryogenic freezing...

while an open system gives way for others to use the energy you once used, a closed system ensures that you allways receive the correct amount of energy...

Sorry, but in a closed system entropy increases to its max, at which time the available free energy becomes zero. Recycling can never be 100% efficient.
 
  • #10
sorry, i don't have a clue about some stuff, it just occurred to me that death was the loss of energy, and through devices like nanites pehaps you could maintain a good stream of well controlled energy throughout your body, by having extra imputs, but i forgot about the aging gene, which i have no clue about atall...
 
  • #11
physics noob said:
...how can that possibly equate to a human? ...

Just to add to what's already been said...

Your body is made of cells. Cells are made of molecules. Molecules are made of atoms. Nutrients (food) provide the building blocks (atoms, molecules) for new cells. When you digest food, you are breaking it down into a form usable to make new cells or to generate energy. Biochemistry makes things happen in a particular way (generation of necessary proteins, enzymes, etc.). DNA is the blueprint for putting these pieces together into a particular organisms like a human.
 
  • #12
Phobos said:
Just to add to what's already been said...

Your body is made of cells. Cells are made of molecules. Molecules are made of atoms. Nutrients (food) provide the building blocks (atoms, molecules) for new cells. When you digest food, you are breaking it down into a form usable to make new cells or to generate energy. Biochemistry makes things happen in a particular way (generation of necessary proteins, enzymes, etc.). DNA is the blueprint for putting these pieces together into a particular organisms like a human.

this makes sense for something in a state of growth, which does require raw materials, but not so much after.

a grown adult human does not make many new cells, but maintains the ones that exist. an adult human is the result of approximately 50 cell divisions (that is, ~2^50 cells total), after which cell senescence takes hold and cell division (in most cell types) comes to a halt.

however, we still eat...the only explanation is one of thermodynamics. we need to maintain negative entropy, this requires energy. This energy comes from the high-energy bonds from the food that we eat. Another way of saying this is that to maintain our "order" we steal the "order" from other organisms.

it has more to do with energy than providing raw materials.
 
  • #13
"Another way of saying this is that to maintain our "order" we steal the "order" from other organisms."

Which nicely defines the division between plants, herbivores and carnivores:
- plants get their energy from the Sun
- herbivores steal the somewhat concentrated energy stored in plants
- carnvores steal the very concentrated energy stored in herbivores
 
  • #14
quetzalcoatl9 said:
a grown adult human does not make many new cells, but maintains the ones that exist. an adult human is the result of approximately 50 cell divisions (that is, ~2^50 cells total), after which cell senescence takes hold and cell division (in most cell types) comes to a halt.
Adult humans (as well as children) are continuously regenerating new cells as older ones die.

We also lose energy to the environment in other ways, such as heat transfer, for which we need to consume food to replace that lost energy.
 
  • #15
quetzalcoatl9 said:
a grown adult human does not make many new cells, but maintains the ones that exist.
Not true, give someone chemotherapy directed against fast dividing cells and see how sick they get.

You turn over a lot of cells in your skin, in your gastrointestinal tract and in your bone marrow. I think you'd be suprised about the quantities of cells that are replenished.

If it were only energy, it would suffice to only take in ATP.. I think it is clear that such a diet would not sufficient: you need building materials to synthesize biologically active molecules in order to function.
 

1. What is the law of conservation of mass and energy?

The law of conservation of mass and energy states that mass and energy can neither be created nor destroyed, but can only be transformed from one form to another.

2. Why is the conservation of mass and energy important?

The conservation of mass and energy is important because it is a fundamental law of nature that helps us understand how the universe works. It also allows us to make predictions and calculations about various physical processes.

3. How does the conservation of mass and energy apply to chemical reactions?

In chemical reactions, the total amount of mass and energy before the reaction must be equal to the total amount of mass and energy after the reaction. This means that the atoms and molecules involved in the reaction may rearrange, but the total number of atoms and the total amount of energy remains constant.

4. Is the conservation of mass and energy violated in any circumstances?

No, the conservation of mass and energy is a fundamental law of nature and is upheld in all physical processes. However, in some cases, it may appear that mass or energy has disappeared, but this is due to our limited understanding or measurement capabilities.

5. How does the conservation of mass and energy relate to Einstein's famous equation, E=mc²?

E=mc² is a mathematical representation of the relationship between mass and energy, which is a key concept in the law of conservation of mass and energy. It shows that even though mass and energy may appear to be different forms, they are fundamentally the same and can be transformed into each other.

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