Designers of transportation networks have to weigh the cost of serving customers against the need for an efficient, robust system. Natural organisms, too, confront tasks in which they need to balance competing desiderata. As it forages for food, for example, a slime mold must balance cost (that is, the amount of protoplasm it extrudes), efficiency, and the ability to withstand injury. Remarkably, as recently reported by Atsushi Tero and colleagues from Japan and the UK, the molds do as well as transportation engineers in balancing their analogous competing needs. Panel a of the figure recreates a 17-cm-wide map of the principal cities served by the Tokyo railway system with a slime mold (yellow) at the location of Tokyo and food flakes (white) representing other cities. In about a day’s time, the slime mold finds where the nourishment is and generates a protoplasm network with the food flakes as nodes. Standard...
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1 March 2010
March 01 2010
Citation
Steven K. Blau; Planes, trains, and slime molds. Physics Today 1 March 2010; 63 (3): 21–22. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4797298
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