Science cartoon on DNA as storage material for digital data
Just 1 gram of DNA is theoretically capable of holding 455 exabytes – enough for all the data held by Google, Facebook and every other major tech company, with room to spare. Robert Grass and his colleagues from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich are working on ways to increase DNA's longevity, with the aim of storing data for thousands or millions of years. They also tried to mimic the way fossils keep a DNA sequence intact. Excluding all water from the environment was key, so they encapsulated the DNA in microscopic spheres of glass. By using certain method they got good result. Further details can be explored from the following links:
Published Paper link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.201411378/abstract;jsessionid=977773072CF230DE602624D7793ABB5D.f04t03
Science Cartoon by Vishal K. Muliya is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License. Based on a work at https://vkmuliya.blogspot.com.
Just 1 gram of DNA is theoretically capable of holding 455 exabytes – enough for all the data held by Google, Facebook and every other major tech company, with room to spare. Robert Grass and his colleagues from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich are working on ways to increase DNA's longevity, with the aim of storing data for thousands or millions of years. They also tried to mimic the way fossils keep a DNA sequence intact. Excluding all water from the environment was key, so they encapsulated the DNA in microscopic spheres of glass. By using certain method they got good result. Further details can be explored from the following links:
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