Scientific American: Olive Oil Yields Soar with NMR

Scientific American: Olive Oil Yields Soar with NMR

| | Comments (0)

"Olive oil producers generally guess the best time to harvest their olives by
checking the fruit's color. The olive has to hit that perfect spot where they've just turned ripe--purple to black--but aren't yet falling to the ground. Now, scientists at Israel's Ben-Gurion University are helping them out with nuclear magnetic resonance, also known as NMR. NMR is usually used medically to create images or measure a specimen's levels of proteins and fat. But this is the first time it's being used industrially.

Researchers first take digital photos of olives at different levels of ripeness.
Then they put the olives in the NMR machine. Within a few seconds it determines the olives' oil content. Combing the photos with the oil information allows scientists to create a database correlating peak oil with perfect color. A farmer in the field could take pictures of his crop. A special camera would average the olives' color and tell him the optimal time to harvest. In a test, a local farmer learned that if he had harvested his crop 10 days earlier, he could have gotten 25 percent more olive oil."

Link to full article

About ShinyPlastic Snips

Here at ShinyPlastic we come across all sorts of interesting stories we want to share with our readers (like this story about Scientific American: Olive Oil Yields Soar with NMR) but we don't have time to write about all of them. Snips are just little clippings of articles we found interesting and want to share with you without making any editorial comment on them.

 
Google
 

Leave a comment

sponsored links

Recent Entries

Monthly Archives

sponsored links
About this Entry About this Page

This page contains a single entry by Mark Mitford (Editor) published on May 12, 2008 4:52 AM.

Boeing begins assembly on third flight-test 787 Dreamliner was the previous entry in this blog.

Flaw turns Gmail into spamming machine is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Technorati

Technorati search

» Blogs that link here