Breaking News

ASUS ROG Unveils Rapture GT-BE19000AI, the World’s First AI Gaming Router TerraMaster Unveils TOS 7 Insider Preview CORSAIR Steps Into the Ring, Announces Novablade Pro Wireless Hall Effect Leverless Fight Controller PROGRADE DIGITAL ANNOUNCES PG25 PRO THUNDERBOLT 5 DOCK Samsung TVs get HDR10 Plus Supported Content

logo

  • Share Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
  • Home
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map

Search form

Tiny robot walks on water

Tiny robot walks on water

Enterprise & IT Sep 13,2004 0

With inspiration from nature and some help from research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a team led by Carnegie Mellon engineering professor Metin Sitti built a tiny robot that can walk on water, much like the insects known as water skimmers or Jesus bugs.

It's only a prototype, but some researchers imagine the water-skimming robot could have many uses. With a chemical sensor, it could monitor water supplies for toxins; with a camera it could be a spy or an explorer; with a net or a boom, it could skim contaminants off the top of water.

Producing it was "the final challenge of microrobotics," said Professor Sitti, who runs Carnegie Mellon's NanoRobotics Lab. "It needs to be so light and so compact."

The robot is little more than a 13mm boxy body made from carbon fibre and eight 5cm steel-wire legs coated with a water-repelling plastic (technically making it a water spider).

It doesn't have a brain, any sensors or a battery. Its "muscles" are three flat-plate piezoelectric actuators - pieces of metal that bend when electricity runs through them. Wires run from the actuators to a power supply.

The robot can stand on water - it doesn't float - and can skim backward and forward, propelling itself with two legs that act like oars. Professor Sitti said he could build a more complex water-skimming robot within six months.

The prototype is especially impressive given researchers didn't know how water skimmers walked on water until last year.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology mathematician John Bush and two graduate students solved the riddle by placing dyes and particles in water and using a high-speed video camera.

The MIT team discovered that water striders move by pushing down on the surface of water with enough force to create valleys, but not enough to break the surface. The water then bounces back like a trampoline to push the insect forward.

Professor Sitti's prototype shows how important lighter and stronger materials have been to robotics.

"If you had asked us 10 years ago to build a water bug, I don't think we would have done it," said Mark Cutkosky, an Stanford University engineering professor who has been building roach-like robots.

Professor Sitti's robot weighs about a gram and so far, it's also cheap. He estimates the materials in his spartan prototype cost about $US10 ($14.40).

From AustralianIT

Tags: MITrobots
Previous Post
AMD Enhances Low-Power Geode Embedded Processors Line
Next Post
Compliance test for DVD+RW Video recorders

Related Posts

  • SK Telecom Introduces 5G-Powered Autonomous Robot to Help Fight Against COVID-19

  • Sony, ANA to Develop Remotely Controlled Avatar Robots

  • Boston Dynamics' Spot Robot Gets Greater Autonomy and Mobility

  • NEDO and Toshiba Release Software Interface For Controlling Different Robots Under a Common System

  • MIT Researchers Says New Coronavirus Contact Tracing App Preserves Privacy

  • Robot Replaces Bartenders in Japanese Bar

  • Boston Dynamics is Open-sourcing The SDK For The Spot Robot

  • Yandex Starts Testing Autonomous Delivery Robot

Latest News

ASUS ROG Unveils Rapture GT-BE19000AI, the World’s First AI Gaming Router
Enterprise & IT

ASUS ROG Unveils Rapture GT-BE19000AI, the World’s First AI Gaming Router

TerraMaster Unveils TOS 7 Insider Preview
Enterprise & IT

TerraMaster Unveils TOS 7 Insider Preview

CORSAIR Steps Into the Ring, Announces Novablade Pro Wireless Hall Effect Leverless Fight Controller
Gaming

CORSAIR Steps Into the Ring, Announces Novablade Pro Wireless Hall Effect Leverless Fight Controller

PROGRADE DIGITAL ANNOUNCES PG25 PRO THUNDERBOLT 5 DOCK
Cameras

PROGRADE DIGITAL ANNOUNCES PG25 PRO THUNDERBOLT 5 DOCK

Samsung TVs get HDR10 Plus Supported Content
Consumer Electronics

Samsung TVs get HDR10 Plus Supported Content

Popular Reviews

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

Terramaster F8-SSD

Terramaster F8-SSD

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

Soundpeats Pop Clip

Soundpeats Pop Clip

Akaso 360 Action camera

Akaso 360 Action camera

Dragon Touch Digital Calendar

Dragon Touch Digital Calendar

Noctua NF-A12x25 G2 fans

Noctua NF-A12x25 G2 fans

be quiet! Pure Loop 3 280mm

be quiet! Pure Loop 3 280mm

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Promotional Opportunities @ CdrInfo.com
  • Advertise on out site
  • Submit your News to our site
  • RSS Feed