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Robot follows in cricket’s footleaps
May 21, 2008
Courtesy Ecole Polytechnique
Fédérale de Lausanne
and World Science staff
A new,
grasshopper-inspired robot that weighs little more than a medium-sized coin and can jump more than 27 times its body size.
These jumpers could be fitted out with tiny sensors to explore difficult
terrain or to aid in search and rescue operations, the developers said.
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About the size of a loc-ust, this tiny
ro-bot can jump 27 times its own size. (Cour-tesy Alain Her-zog, EPFL)
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Their mechanism “is unique because it allows micro-robots to travel over many types of rough terrain where no other walking or wheeled robot could go,” said developer Dario Floreano of the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne, Switzerland.
“These tiny jumping robots could be fitted with solar cells to recharge between jumps and deployed in swarms for extended exploration of remote areas on Earth or on other planets.”
The devices were presented at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers International Conference on Robotics and Automation May 21 in Pasadena,
Calif. The tiny robots weigh seven grams (one-fourth of an ounce) and can leap 1.4 meters (4.6 feet.)
Small jumping animals such as fleas, locusts, grasshoppers and frogs use so-called elastic energy storage to slowly charge and quickly release their energy. In this way, they can achieve powerful jumps and high accelerations.
The jumping robot uses the same principle, researchers said, charging two torsion springs via a small 0.6-gram pager motor and a cam. To optimize the jumping, the legs can be adjusted for jumping force, takeoff angle and force profile during the acceleration phase, developers added. A tiny battery on board allows the device to make up to 320 jumps, three seconds apart.
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Researchers have unveiled a new, grasshopper-inspired jumping robot that weighs as much as a medium-sized coin and can jump more than 27 times its body size.
These jumpers could be fitted out with tiny sensors to explore rough, inaccessible terrain or to aid in search and rescue operations, the developers said.
Their mechanism “is unique because it allows micro-robots to travel over many types of rough terrain where no other walking or wheeled robot could go,” said developer Dario Floreano of the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne, Switzerland.
“These tiny jumping robots could be fitted with solar cells to recharge between jumps and deployed in swarms for extended exploration of remote areas on Earth or on other planets.”
The devices were presented at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers International Conference on Robotics and Automation May 21 in Pasadena, Calif.. The tiny robots weigh a mere 7 grams (one-fourth of an ounce) and can leap 1.4 meters (4.6 feet.)
Small jumping animals such as fleas, locusts, grasshoppers and frogs use so-called elastic energy storage to slowly charge and quickly release their jumping energy. In this way, they can achieve powerful jumps and high accelerations.
The jumping robot uses the same principle, researchers said, charging two torsion springs via a small 0.6-gram pager motor and a cam. To optimize the jumping, the legs can be adjusted for jumping force, takeoff angle and force profile during the acceleration phase, developers added. A tiny battery on board allows the device to make up to 320 jumps, three seconds apart.
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