Mozart has been credited with everything from increasing the intelligence of unborn babies to boosting the milk yield of cows but never until now improving the efficiency of bacteria at sewage plant...
According to the Guardian a German plant is doing just this. Anton Stucki, chief operator of the sewage centre in Treuenbrietzen, south-west of Berlin, believes the chords and cadences of the compositions speed up the way the organisms work and lead to a quicker breakdown of biomass.
"We think the secret is in the vibrations of the music, which penetrate everything – including the water, the sewage and the cells. It creates a certain resonance that stimulates the microbes and helps them to work better. We're still in the test phase, but I've already noticed that the sewage breakdown is more efficient," he said.
He has developed a sound system that projects Mozart operas in several directions at once, recreating a spread of sound similar to that of a concert hall. And he compares the process to that of an orchestra. "Just as in an orchestra where everything has to be in harmony, so it is here. But of course you need the right frequencies and the right music, and Mozart hits the spot."
So far Stucki's preferred composition is The Magic Flute. "But we're keen to try others as well, and to see what effect they have," he said. "I'm convinced we can influence the nitrate contents with this method."
The method was first developed at a smaller sewage treatment plant in Austria whose owners said it helped reduce the cost of waste treatment. The plant expects savings of as much as €1,000 a month. It has welcomed requests from any scientists who wish to follow the process.
Well... err.... If bacteria like Mozart who am I to argue....
4 comments:
Xxxl wrote an interesting thesis that Mozart was all mathematical and that this was related to the Masons. I'm still working out how it connects.
Hmm perhaps bacteria wear apros and belong to the unicellular branch of the Mediocre Mafia!
Hmmm. Brings a whole new meaning to Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, doesn't it?
Haha Susan.. Eine Keline sludgemusik?
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