Bomb-Detecting Bees 20
jmichaelg writes: "The NY Times is running an article on using bees to sniff out bombs. Bees can smell scents that are diluted to a few parts per billion (the Times says "few thousand parts per trillion," but what do you expect in an innumerate society?)
The bees are trained to pass up flowers in favor of bombs within a couple of hours using sugar water as the reward. What I found to be one of the most interesting findings was that the bees communicate what the target scent is so you only need to teach a few bees what to look for and they'll pass the word on to rest of the colony. The Dept of Defense is developing a radio transmitter the size of a grain of salt they'll glue to the bees to communicate where the bomb is to the bee handlers."
PPQ (Score:4, Informative)
Speaking of innumeracy, that would be parts per quadrillion, not parts per billion.
Re:PPQ (Score:2)
I don't think so. Please correct me if I'm wrong here:
1000/1,000,000,000,000
thousand per trillion
divided by 1000 (lose 3 zeros)
1/1,000,000,000
one (part) per billion
Re:PPQ (Score:2)
Re:PPQ (Score:1)
1,000,000 = one million
1,000,000,000,000 = one billion
1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 = one trillion
You americans are silly.
Re:PPQ (Score:3, Interesting)
Trillion:
1. The cardinal number equal to 10^12.
2. Chiefly British. The cardinal number equal to 10^18.
I did not know that! I guess we'll call that "a space probe crashes into a planet accident waiting to happen"
Re:PPQ (Score:1, Informative)
Hmm...another coverup? (Score:1)
the best idea (Score:5, Funny)
Imagine: a family reunion. Barbecue and beer in the park. The shady trees and babbling brook. Paradise.
Then: the buzzing of bees! A nest of trouble, stirred up by your mischievous nephew!
What to do?!?
Enter: your anti-bee force! A fleet of tiny jets, autonomous yet steered by a microchip! They soar around, bombing the bees with poison gas! The festivities continue, bee free!
Re:the best idea (Score:2)
Re:the best idea (Score:1)
Then: the buzzing of bees! A nest of trouble, stirred up by your mischievous nephew!
"Jonny, quit buzzing like a bee... Oh well, he was an annoying nephew anyway."
Diamond Age here we come... (Score:4, Insightful)
Will they also train the bees to viciously swarm and attack the person carrying the bomb?
Don't need a Diamond Age (Score:2)
They won't need to train anything. Just have some other bees, or wasps, or large birds, or my neighbor's dog, or anything else that naturally chases and [tries to] eat bees.
Why Bees are a brilliant choice! (Score:4, Funny)
People running and screaming from the building used to scream "There's a bomb in the building!"
Now they will scream "There's a bomb and BEES in the building!"
-Sou|cuttr
thousandths, not thousands. (Score:1)
few parts per billion?!! (Score:1)
who needs a part in a trillion ? (Score:3, Interesting)
when we can make...MILLIONS !
More seriously : what if some terrorist
shows up at the airport with a friend
covered by pollen and sugar ? What
would be the bee prefer ?
And how do the bee teach to each other the smell
of TNT ? The dance they perform would be
interesting to decode from the semantical
point of view (I had read stuff about how
they expressed "next left relative to sun
after the tree 20 yards from the hive" )
Bees teaching bees (Score:3, Informative)
I just heard this story on NPR and the researcher described how to train the bees. Simply add the scent of TNT to a feeding station filled with sugar water. Pretty soon the bees associate the smell of TNT with food.
I'd guess the bees learn from each other in a similar way. They follow the directions (given in the normal way) to the feeding station and soon they too associate the smell with food.
Hmmmm... (Score:1)