Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
<head> | <head> | ||
<style> | <style> | ||
+ | |||
/* hides "Team:Cornell" and iGEM logo */ | /* hides "Team:Cornell" and iGEM logo */ | ||
#top_title { | #top_title { | ||
Line 427: | Line 428: | ||
} | } | ||
/*End Grid for Home Page*/ | /*End Grid for Home Page*/ | ||
+ | |||
</style> | </style> | ||
<title>Team:Cornell - 2019.igem.org</title> | <title>Team:Cornell - 2019.igem.org</title> |
Revision as of 18:21, 12 October 2019
We are building a biological band-pass filter. While
biological band pass filters have been developed before, none respond to frequency-based inputs but
instead
respond to amplitude based inputs.
By controlling the rates of degradation of the components of our system, we are putting together a frequency-response low-pass and high-pass filter to
create a
novel band-pass filter.
Our filter would allow bacteria to respond only to certain frequency-based inputs, and give it even more digital logic-like character, long a goal of synthetic biology. Moving forward, our project could be an important tool for scientists as synthetic biology branches into increasingly diverse fields.
Our filter would allow bacteria to respond only to certain frequency-based inputs, and give it even more digital logic-like character, long a goal of synthetic biology. Moving forward, our project could be an important tool for scientists as synthetic biology branches into increasingly diverse fields.