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  <title><![CDATA[Inquiring Minds @ Tech Public Lecture: How Nature Harvests Sunlight: The Physics of Photosynthesis]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<h4>Dr. Klaus Schulten of the University of Illinois at Urban-Champaign will present a free public lecture hosted by the School of Physics.</h4><p>Photosynthesis is one of the great-impact inventions of biological evolution. &nbsp;Indeed, life on Earth is fueled energy-wise mainly by sun light. &nbsp;Many, so-called photosynthetic, life forms harvest sun light directly, for example, plants, algae and bacteria; other life forms use sun light indirectly, like herbivorous animals. &nbsp;This lecture tells the story a particular simple, yet amazing photosynthetic apparatus, the chromatophore, found in purple bacteria. </p><p>The photosynthetic chromatophore is a spherical shell of 50 nm diameter that exists in hundreds of copies in the bacterial cell and converts&nbsp;sun light into chemical synthesis of an energy-rich molecule, adenosin triphosphate (ATP). Each chromatophore is made of over hundred&nbsp;protein complexes with thousands of light absorbing and electron conducting molecules embedded in them; the complexes are held&nbsp;together by a membrane made of 20,000 lipid molecules. Despite its complexity and heterogeneity the chromatophore can be viewed today&nbsp;through advances in experimental and computational biology at atomic- and electronic-level detail in its entire structure and function. One sees a clockwork of linked,&nbsp;mostly rather elementary processes: light absorption, coherent and incoherent exciton formation, intermolecular electron and proton&nbsp;transfer, charge carrier diffusion, electrostatic steering of protein- mediated electron conduction, molecular motor action driven by proton&nbsp;conduction, and lastly mechanically driven ATP synthesis. </p><p>For the first time a major part of a biological cell has been resolved in its entirety&nbsp;at the level of truly basic physics, showcasing how Angstrom- scale processes lead to 100-nm-scale intelligent overall function. In viewing&nbsp;the chromatophore through a beautifully detailed movie one can recognize in an exemplary fashion how evolution engineered an apparatus crucial for solar energy-driven life&nbsp;on Earth, utilizing amazing processes on the small scale by linking them together in a clock-work fashion such that an efficient, robust and&nbsp;adaptive cell-scale function emerges.</p>]]></body>
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      <value><![CDATA[2014-11-03T17:00:00-05:00]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p><a href="mailto:alison.morain@physics.gatech.edu">alison.morain@physics.gatech.edu</a></p>]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[(404) 894-8886]]></value>
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      <url><![CDATA[http://www.physics.gatech.edu/seminars-colloquia/series/public-lecture/klaus-schulten-20141103]]></url>
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