Last year I caught a number of strange sounds coming from the tree in
my front yard, one of them being a fake cricket recording Trees now
generate a voltage  Maybe this Univ of Washington Technology
announcement might be what was powering whatever devices were in my
tree

I am not saying that the trees are only being used for this one
simple thing. Trees make great antennas in propagating the ELF waves
as well.

Their is ALWAYS MORE THAN WHAT MEETS OUR EYES
AND EARS. It is so important than none of us forget that
If their is a way they definitely have a will to do it to us

Maybe this is a method that might have relevance in other
suffers lifes


ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT RUNS ENTIRELY OFF POWER IN TREES


http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/Electrical_Circuit_Runs_Entirely_...


by Staff Writers
Seattle WA (SPX) Sep 11, 2009


You've heard about flower power


. What about tree power? It turns out that it's there, in small but
measurable quantities. There's enough power in trees for University of
Washington researchers to run an electronic circuit, according to
results to be published in an upcoming issue of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Transactions on Nanotechnology.
"As far as we know this is the first peer-reviewed paper of someone
powering something entirely by sticking electrodes into a tree," said
co-author Babak Parviz, a UW associate professor of electrical
engineering.
A study last year from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found
that plants generate a voltage of up to 200 millivolts when one
electrode is placed in a plant and the other in the surrounding soil.
Those researchers have since started a company developing forest
sensors that exploit this new power source. The UW team sought to
further academic research in the field of tree power by building
circuits to run off that energy. They successfully ran a circuit
solely off tree power for the first time.

Co-author Carlton Himes, a UW undergraduate student, spent last summer
exploring likely sites. Hooking nails to trees and connecting a
voltmeter, he found that bigleaf maples, common on the UW campus,
generate a steady voltage of up to a few hundred millivolts.

The UW team next built a device that could run on the available power.
Co-author Brian Otis, a UW assistant professor of electrical
engineering, led the development of a boost converter, a device that
takes a low incoming voltage and stores it to produce a greater
output.
His team's custom boost converter works for input voltages of as
little as 20 millivolts (a millivolt is one-thousandth of a volt), an
input voltage lower than any existing such device. It produces an
output voltage of 1..1 volts, enough to run low-power sensors.

The UW circuit is built from parts measuring 130 nanometers and it
consumes on average just 10 nanowatts of power during operation (a
nanowatt is one billionth of a watt).
"Normal electronics are not going to run on the types of voltages and
currents that we get out of a tree. But the nanoscale is not just in
size, but also in the energy and power consumption," Parviz said.

"As new generations of technology come online," he added, "I think
it's warranted to look back at what's doable or what's not doable in
terms of a power source."
Despite using special low-power devices, the boost converter and other
electronics would spend most of their time in sleep mode in order to
conserve energy, creating a complication.
"If everything goes to sleep, the system will never wake up," Otis
said.

To solve this problem Otis' team built a clock that runs continuously
on 1 nanowatt, about a thousandth the power required to run a
wristwatch, and when turned on operates at 350 millivolts, about a
quarter the voltage in an AA battery. The low-power clock produces an
electrical pulse once every few seconds, allowing a periodic wakeup of
the system.

The tree-power phenomenon is different from the popular potato or
lemon experiment, in which two different metals react with the food to
create an electric potential difference that causes a current to flow.
"We specifically didn't want to confuse this effect with the potato
effect, so we used the same metal for both electrodes," Parviz said.
Tree power is unlikely to replace solar power for most applications,
Parviz admits. But the system could provide a low-cost option for
powering tree sensors that might be used to detect environmental
conditions or forest fires. The electronic output could also be used
to gauge a tree's health.
"It's not exactly established where these voltages come from. But
there seems to be some signaling in trees, similar to what happens in
the human body but with slower speed," Parviz said. "I'm interested in
applying our results as a way of investigating what the tree is doing.

When you go to the doctor, the first thing that they measure is your
pulse. We don't really have something similar for trees."
Other co-authors are Eric Carlson and Ryan Ricchiuti of the UW. The
research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation
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