BACTERIA: One-celled living organisms,
typically about one micron in diameter. Bacteria are among the oldest, simplest, and smallest types of cells.
BIOMASS: The mass of living organisms within a
given environment, measured in terms of weight per unit of area.
BIOSTASIS: A condition in which an organism's cell and tissue
structures are preserved, allowing later restoration by cell repair machines.
BULK TECHNOLOGY: Technology
based on the manipulation of atoms and molecules in bulk, rather than
individually; most present technology falls in this category.
CAPILLARIES: Microscopic blood vessels
that carry oxygenated blond to tissues.
CELL: A membrane-bound
unit, typically microns in diameter. All plants and animals are made up of one or more cells (trillions, in the case of
human beings). In general, each cell of a multicellular
organism contains a nucleus holding all of the genetic information of the
organism.
CELL REPAIR MACHINE: A
system including nanocomputers and molecular scale
sensors and tools, programmed to repair damage to cells and tissues.
CROSS-LINKING:
A process forming chemical bonds between two separate molecular chains.
CRYOBIOLOGY: The
science of biology at low temperatures; research in cryobiology has made
possible the freezing and storing of sperm and blood for later use.
CRYSTAL LATTICE:
The regular three-dimensional pattern of atoms in a crystal.
DESIGN AHEAD: The use of known
principles of science and engineering to design systems that can
only be built with tools not yet available; this permits faster
exploitation of the abilities of new tools.
DESIGN DIVERSITY: A form of
redundancy in which components of different design serve the same purpose; this
can enable systems to function properly despite design flaws.
DISASSEMBLER: A
system of nanomachines able to take an object apart a
few atoms at a time, while recording its structure at the molecular level.
DISSOLUTION:
Deterioration in an organism such that its original structure cannot be
determined from its current state.
DNA (DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID):
DNA molecules are long chains consisting of four kinds of nucleotides; the
order of these nucleotides encodes the information needed to construct protein
molecules. These in turn make up much of the molecular machinery of the cell.
DNA is the genetic material of cells. (See also
RNA.)
ENGINEERING: The use
of scientific knowledge and trial-and-error to design systems. (See
Science.)
ENTROPY: A measure of
the disorder of a physical system.
ENVIRONMENTALS: People who
study the environment.
ENZYME: A protein that acts as a catalyst in a biochemical
reaction.
EURISKO: A computer program developed by
Professor Douglas
Lenat which is able to apply heuristic rules for performing
various tasks, including the invention of new heuristic rules.
EVOLUTION: A process
in which a population of self-replicating entities undergoes variation, with
successful variants spreading and becoming the basis for further variation.
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH:
Growth that proceeds in a manner characterized by periodic doublings.
FACT FORUM: A
procedure for seeking facts through a structured, arbitrated debate between
experts.
FREE
RADICAL: A
molecule containing an unpaired electron, typically highly unstable and
reactive. Free radicals can damage the molecular machinery of biological
systems, leading to cross-linking and mutation.
GEOTHERMAL:
Relating to the heat of the earth.
HEISENBERG UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE: A quantum-mechanical principle with the consequence
that the position and momentum of an object cannot be precisely determined. The
Heisenberg principle helps determine the size of electron
clouds, and hence the size of atoms.
HEURISTICS: Rules of thumb used to
guide one in the direction of probable solutions to a problem.
HYPERTEXT:
A
computer-based system for linking text and other information with
cross-references, making access fast and criticisms easy to publish and find.
INFRASTRUCTURE:
The basic parts
of a community that help it run.
INTEGRATED
CIRCUIT (IC): An electronic
circuit consisting of many interconnected devices on one piece of
semiconductor, typically into 10 millimeters on a side. ICs are the major
building blocks of today's computers.
ION: An atom with more or fewer electrons than
those needed to cancel the electronic charge of the nucleus. An ion is an atom
with a net electric charge.
KEVLAR (TM): A synthetic fiber made
by E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc. Stronger
than most steels, Kevlar is among the strongest commercially available materials
and is used in aerospace construction, bulletproof vests, and other
applications requiring a high strength-to-weight ratio.
LEPTONS:
A group of
particles that are a part of a weak interaction with the electron, the muons,
and the associated neutrinos.
LIGHTSAIL: A spacecraft propulsion system that gains thrust
from the pressure of light striking a thin metal film.
LIMITED ASSEMBLER:
An assembler with built-in limits that constrain its use (for example, to make
hazardous uses difficult or impossible, or to build just one thing).
MEME: An idea that, like a
gene, can replicate and evolve. Examples of memes (and meme systems)
include political theories, proselytizing religions,
and the idea of memes itself.
MOLECULAR
TECHNOLOGY: See
Nanotechnology.
MOLECULE: The smallest
particle of a chemical substance; typically a group of atoms held together in a
particular patter, by chemical bonds.
MUTATION: An
inheritable modification in a genetic molecule, such as DNA. Mutations
may be good, bad, or neutral in their effects on an
organism; competition weeds out the bad, leaving the good and the neutral.
NANO: A prefix meaning ten
to the minus ninth power, or one billionth.
NANOCOMPUTER: A computer made from
components (mechanical, electronic, or otherwise) on a nanometer scale.
NANODOTS: Tiny dots that are only visible when they're separated.
NANOFABRICATION: Building
products and structures using man-made tools with the
exact position of each atom.
NANOMANIPULATION:
Building
things from bottom to up, atom by atom.
NANOMETER:
1/1,000,000,000 of a meter.
NANOSTRUCTURES: Structures whose length characteristics
are at the nanoscale.
NANOPARTICLES: Tiny particles
as small as a billionth of a meter.
NANOTECHNOLOGY: Technology based on the manipulation of individual
atoms and molecules to build structures to complex, atomic specifications.
NEURAL SIMULATION:
Imitating the functions of a neural system - such as the brain - by simulating
the function of each cell.
NEURON: A nerve cell,
such as those found in the brain.
NUCLEOTIDE: A small molecule composed
of three parts: a nitrogen base (a purine or pyrimidine), a sugar (ribose or deoxyribose),
and phosphate. Nucleotides serve as the building blocks of nucleic acids (DNA
and RNA).
NUCLEUS: In biology, a
structure in advanced cells that contains the chromosomes and apparatus to
transcribe DNA into RNA. In physics, the small, dense
core of an atom.
ORGANIC MOLECULE: A molecule
containing carbon; the complex molecules in living
systems are all organic molecules in this sense.
PETROLEUM:
A thick mix of
hydrocarbons that appear under the Earth that create
natural gas, gasoline, naphtha, kerosene, fuel and lubricating oils, paraffin
wax, and asphalt.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS:
The process by which producers, such as
plants, make their own food using energy from the Sun.
PHOTOVOLTIACS: Devices that directly convert sunlight
into electrical energy
POLYMER: A molecule made up of smaller units bonded to form a
chain.
POSITIVE SUM: A term used to
describe a situation in which one or more entities can gain without other
entities suffering an equal loss - for example, a growing economy. (See
Zero Sum.)
QUARKS: A group of
elementary particles with electric charges of magnitude.
REDUNDANCY: The use of
more components than are needed to perform a function; this can enable a system
to operate properly despite failed components.
REPLICATOR: In discussions of
evolution, a replicator is an entity (such as a gene,
a meme, or the contents of a computer memory disk)
which can get itself copied, including any changes it may have undergone. In a
broader sense, a replicator is a system
which can make a copy of itself, not necessarily copying any changes it
may have undergone. A rabbit's genes are replicators
in the first sense (a change in a gene can be inherited); the rabbit itself is
a replicator only in the second sense (a notch made
in its ear can't be inherited).
RESTRICTION ENZYME:
An enzyme that cuts DNA at a specific site, allowing biologists to insert or
delete genetic material.
RIBONUCLEASE: An
enzyme that cuts RNA molecules into smaller pieces.
RIBOSOME: A molecular machine, found in
all cells, which builds protein molecules according to instructions read from
RNA molecules. Ribosomes are complex structures built
of protein and RNA molecules.
RNA: Ribonucleic acid; a
molecule similar to DNA. In cells, the information in DNA is transcribed to RNA, which in turn is "read" to
direct protein construction. Some viruses use RNA as their genetic material.
SILICON: symbol Si,
semimetallic element that is the second most common
element on earth, after oxygen. The atomic number of silicon is 14.
SCIENCE: The process of developing a systematized knowledge
of the world through the variation and testing of hypotheses. (See
Engineering.)
SCIENCE COURT:
A name (originally applied by the
media) for a government-conducted fact forum.
SEALED ASSEMBLER LABORATORY:
A work space, containing assemblers, encapsulated in a
way that allows information to flow in and out but does not allow the escape of
assemblers or their products.
SYNAPSE: A structure
that transmits signals from a neuron to an adjacent neuron (or other cell).
SYNTHESIS:
The process of forming a complex
compound through a series of one or more chemical reactions involving simpler
elements.
THERMOSTABILIZE: To heat until it
is at a very high temperature to kill bacteria.
VIRUS:
A small replicator
consisting of little but a package of DNA or RNA which, when injected into a
host cell, can direct the cell's molecular machinery to make more viruses.
ZERO SUM: A term
used to describe a situation in which one entity can gain only if other
entities suffer an equal loss; for example, a private poker game. (See
Positive Sum.)
