Tiny Robotic Crab Is Smallest-Ever Remote-Controlled Walking Robot (northwestern.edu) 20
Northwestern University engineers have developed the smallest-ever remote-controlled walking robot -- and it comes in the form of a tiny, adorable peekytoe crab. From the report: Just a half-millimeter wide, the tiny crabs can bend, twist, crawl, walk, turn and even jump. The researchers also developed millimeter-sized robots resembling inchworms, crickets and beetles. Although the research is exploratory at this point, the researchers believe their technology might bring the field closer to realizing micro-sized robots that can perform practical tasks inside tightly confined spaces.
Smaller than a flea, the crab is not powered by complex hardware, hydraulics or electricity. Instead, its power lies within the elastic resilience of its body. To construct the robot, the researchers used a shape-memory alloy material that transforms to its "remembered" shape when heated. In this case, the researchers used a scanned laser beam to rapidly heat the robot at different targeted locations across its body. A thin coating of glass elastically returns that corresponding part of structure to its deformed shape upon cooling.
As the robot changes from one phase to another -- deformed to remembered shape and back again -- it creates locomotion. Not only does the laser remotely control the robot to activate it, the laser scanning direction also determines the robot's walking direction. Scanning from left to right, for example, causes the robot to move from right to left. The research was published in the journal Science Robotics.
Smaller than a flea, the crab is not powered by complex hardware, hydraulics or electricity. Instead, its power lies within the elastic resilience of its body. To construct the robot, the researchers used a shape-memory alloy material that transforms to its "remembered" shape when heated. In this case, the researchers used a scanned laser beam to rapidly heat the robot at different targeted locations across its body. A thin coating of glass elastically returns that corresponding part of structure to its deformed shape upon cooling.
As the robot changes from one phase to another -- deformed to remembered shape and back again -- it creates locomotion. Not only does the laser remotely control the robot to activate it, the laser scanning direction also determines the robot's walking direction. Scanning from left to right, for example, causes the robot to move from right to left. The research was published in the journal Science Robotics.
Going to need more (Score:1)
not a robot (Score:3)
It's not a robot, it's not even a waldo. It's a remotely operated peripheral.
Re: (Score:3)
I was thinking puppet, but definitely not a robot.
Wrong animals (Score:2)
"The researchers also developed millimeter-sized robots resembling inchworms, crickets and beetles. "
Spiders would be the most fun to give friends and family the creeps.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Wrong animals (Score:2)
Every tiny crab carries a small amount of plutonium. Once they cluster together they can go supercritcal. Now launch them into space where lasers have excellent line of sight and range.
Re: (Score:2)
Robot? FAIL (Score:2)
This doesn't even get close to meeting the definition of what constitutes a robot.
By the loose definition these clowns use, a leaf tumbling in the wind would be a robot.
Where have I seen this before (Score:2)
"a shape-memory alloy material that transforms to its 'remembered' shape when heated": T-1000: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
I for one welcome our robotic spidercrab overlords (Score:2)
Adorable, yes! But -- Ooh, Ah -- that's how it always starts. Then later there's the running and the screaming...
Robot... lol (Score:1)
This is about as "robotic" as one of those board games where the field vibrates and the players move around.
Re: Robot... lol (Score:2)
I also love how this "robot" needs to be heated by an external laser to work.
"Look at this tiny radio I have! Pay no attention to the giant backpack full of vacuum tubes and car batteries needed to make it work."
So wait (Score:2)
If I use a fan to blow some dust particles around, I have a fleet of robots?