• Categories

    • Automotive Gadgets
    • Cool Gadgets
    • Electronic Gadgets
    • Funny & Gag Gadgets
    • Concepts
    • Gadget Toys
    • Gadget News
    • Digital Cameras
    • Cell Phones
  • Latest Posts

      First Sony Ericsson TD-SCDMA Phone A8i for China Mobile
      Sony Ericsson Vivaz
      Finis Swimsense watch tells you about your swimming
      Hotmail Now Pushes Mail to Your Phone
      Dell Aero
      Gadget Thumbnails for 30-Aug-2010
      Sony Ericsson UK Tweets Xperia X10 Family Will Be Receiving Android 2.1 Upgrade By The End Of September
      Ithaca College Tots program uses Wii Balance Board
      Intuit GoPayment and Mophie Marketplace Combination Enable iPhone Credit Card Processing
      ZTE Salute
  • Friends

    • Cell Database
    • Cell Phone News and Reviews
    • Cell Phones

Search:

Robot mimics basilisk movement

CATEGORY: Gadget News | SOURCE:

basilisk-robot.jpgWe all know that walking on water is a miracle from the human point of view, but it isn’t really a problem if you’re a basilisk. What happens if you’re a robot instead? Logic dictates that something as heavy as a robot wouldn’t be able to last the distance across a body of water, but the NanoRobotics team at Carnegie Mellon University seem to have a differing opinion as they are currently hard at work on a robot that will soon be able to skim across water just like the basilisk (also known as the “Jesus Lizard” for obvious reasons).

This group of researchers claim that there is some amphibious potential in such a robot that could potentially result in an efficiency boost to a boat. After all, the laws of physics dictate that a vehicle that runs across the surface of water will experience very little viscous drag for greater efficiency. To date, computer simulations have proved encouraging, with the benefits of efficiency gains in the design and motion over the standard evolutionary model provided by the basilisk especially when two or more sets of running legs are used. So far a number of leg designs have been tested but there is no final prototype decided upon just yet.

Just how does the basilisk perform this ‘miracle’? For starters, it is capable of running across the surface of a body of water at speeds of up to 1.5 meters per second without using the help of surface tension to keep it afloat unlike other water riding animals and insects. Instead, it elevates and propels itself by the slapping motion of its large, webbed feet. The Water Runner Robot will ultimately be designed based on the same principles. No idea on when such technology will be available for amphibious vehicle designs, but some progress is always better than none.

Source: Gizmag

Related Posts:

  • Robot that Can Walk on Water
  • Roboquad
  • Lego Mindstorms NXT
  • Walking Robot Vehicle
  • Robot has broken heart

Read Original Post Here


Comments:



No Comments

No comments yet.

Comments RSS TrackBack Identifier URI

Leave a comment

Help, there’s a poltergeist in the library! Boeing has new aircraft design