French Physicist Creates New Melodies - Plant Songs
Remember those song birds we used to hear in the fields? The sounds of animals
in nature singing a symphony of soft and subtle sounds as
all things flow together to create a living and vibrant concerto? Science is now
showing that these sounds actually do influence the growth
of plants. Researchers have demonstrated that plants respond to sounds in
pro-found ways which not only influence their overall health but
also increase the speed of growth and the size of the plant.
Many people remember hearing in the late 1960's and 1970's about the idea that
plants respond to music. There were lots of projects in
high schools and colleges which successfully tested the effects of sound on
plant growth. It was determined through repetitive testing that
plants did respond to music and sound. The first book which brought this idea to
most of us was: The Secret Life of Plants, by Peter
Tompkins and Christopher Bird (Harper & Row 1973). In this best selling book a
number of astounding revelations about plant growth
were revealed. The idea that plants were influenced by sound in both positive
and negative ways was demonstrated by several world class
scientists at that time.
When we think of plants being affected by sunlight we are really looking at the
effect of a portion of the electromagnetic spectrum on
plants ? that portion which includes visible light. It should not surprise us
that sound also impacts plant growth because it is, in essence, an
extension to other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The science was first disclosed in an article by Andy Coghlan which appeared in
New Scientist (May 28, 1994, p.10). The article confirmed
old ideas by placing them in a scientific context. It tells an excellent story
about the impact of sound on plant growth, bringing to light what
was before considered esoteric or mysterious science. After reading this short
article and those which follow in this issue of the Flashpoints
a good deal more will be thought of "singing gardeners" and "plant
communicators."
Many people remember reading accounts of plant growth being stimulated by sound
waves. At that time, "talking" to plants and playing
plants different types of music was used to influence growth. A number of people
were using these techniques without being able to
completely explain the phenomena. This article is part of that story ? a story
which could have a profound impact on the way we grow and
produce our food.
Eccentrics who sing to their plants? People playing melodies to organic matter
with the expectation that it will help stimulate growth? These
ideas were the thoughts of some "non-scientists" until French physicist and
musician, Joel Sternheimer, discovered the mechanism for how
plants respond to the stimulation of sound waves. Sternheimer com-poses musical
note sequences which help plants grow and has applied
for an international patent1 covering the concept.
The sound sequences are not random but are carefully constructed melodies. Each
note is chosen to correspond to an amino acid in a
protein with the full tune corresponding to the entire protein. What this means
is that the sounds sequenced in just the right order results in
a tune which is unique and harmonizes with the internal structure of a specific
plant type. Each plant type has a different sequence of notes
to stimulate its growth. According to New Scientist, "Sternheimer claims that
when plants "hear" the appropriate tune, they produce more of
that protein. He also writes tunes that inhibit the synthesis of proteins." In
other words, desirable plants could be stimulated to grow while
undesirable plants (weeds for instance) could be inhibited. This is done with
electromagnetic energy, in this case sound waves, pulsed to the
right set of frequencies thus effecting the plant at an energetic and
submolecular level.
Sternheimer translates into audible vibrations of music the quantum vibrations
that occur at the molecular level as a protein is being
assembled from its constituent amino acids. By using simple physics he is able
to compose music which achieves this correlation.
Sternheimer indicated to New Scientist that each musical note which he composes
for the plant is a multiple of original frequencies that
occur when amino acids join the protein chain. He says that playing the right
notes stimulates the plant and increases growth. This idea is
particularly interesting because it may lead to the eventual obsolescence of
fertilizers used to stimulate plant growth. This new method
would be cheap and relatively easily provided throughout the world, thereby
avoiding many of the problems associated with the extraction,
shipping, environmental and economic costs of chemical fertilizers.
Playing the right tune stimulates the formation of a plant's protein. "The
length of a note corresponds to the real time it takes for each
amino acid to come after the next," according to Sternheimer, who studied
quantum physics and mathematics at Princeton University in
New Jersey.
In experiments by Sternheimer, he claims that tomatoes exposed to his melodies
grew two-and-a-half times as large as those which were
untreated. Some of the treated plants were sweeter in addition to being
significantly larger. The musical sequences stimulated three tomato
growth promoters, cytochrome C, and thaumatin (a flavoring compound). According
to Sternheimer in the New Scientist, "Six molecules
were being played to the tomatoes for a total of three minutes a day."
Sternheimer also claims to have stopped the mosaic virus by playing note
sequences that inhibited enzymes required by the virus. This virus
would have harmed the tomato plants.
The note sequences used by the inventor are very short and need only be played
one time. For example, the sequence for for cytochrome C
lasts just 29 seconds. According to Sternheimer, "on average, you get four amino
acids played per second" in this series.
The inventor also issued a warning for those repeating his experiments. He warns
to be careful with the sound sequences because they can
affect people. "Don't ask a musician to play them," he says. Sternheimer
indicated that one of his musicians had difficulty breathing after
playing the tune for cytochrome C.
Plant stimulation by sound may have profound implications. The idea that a cheap
source of "electromagnetic fertilizer" has been
developed should be exciting for many third world countries. At a time when
human progress can be made through simple solutions in
agriculture, resources are being wasted in the extraction of mineral and oil
compounds for fertilizers. If this method of fertilization were
followed the human intellect would prove superior to physical capital in terms
of distribution and production of this new technology.
The idea that sound can have a healing effect on humans is being explored by a
number of independent scientists around the world. The
know-ledge of the "sound effect on proteins" offers insights to health
practitioners of the benefits to humans. In addition to the favorable
economic factors, the increased vitality of the plant substances can positively
impact the health of all humans that consume them.
The patent includes melodies for cytochrome oxidase and cytochrome C which are
two proteins involved in respiration. It also includes
sound sequences for troponin C which regulates calcium uptake in muscles.
Further, a tune was developed for inhibiting chalcone synthase
which is an enzyme involved in making plant pigments.