Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Now, self organising 'smart' robots

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Aug, 2014 07:11 AM
    Scientists have created a swarm of over 1,000 coin-sized robots that can assemble themselves into two-dimensional (2D) shapes by communicating with their neighbours.
     
    "The self-organisation techniques used by the tiny machines - called kilobots - could aid the development of 'smart' robots that reconfigure themselves," researchers said.
     
    "This shape-shifting robot flock is analogous to ants that build bridges out of their own bodies, demonstrating modular behaviour that allows them to adapt quickly to their surroundings," explained Michael Rubenstein, a computer scientist at Harvard University, Massachusetts in US.
     
    The robots are programmed with a simple set of rules and an image of the shape to be formed.
     
    To begin with, the robots are arranged in a tightly packed, arbitrary shape on a flat surface.
     
    The robots communicate using infrared light, but they are only able to transmit and receive information with the robots nearest to them - so they cannot "see" the whole collective.
     
    However, the "seed" robots act as the point of origin for a coordinate system.
     
    The information on their position propagates outward through the swarm like fire signals across the peaks of a mountain range.
     
    This allows each bot to determine where it is and whether it is inside the shape programmed by researchers.
     
    Such behaviour could be useful in creating programmable matter: tiny robots the size of sand grains that could rearrange themselves into tools of any shape, such as a wrench.
     
    "These future robots would act like a three-dimensional printer, but instead of printing with plastic filament, you would be printing with robots that can move themselves," Rubenstein added.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Science and reported in the journal Nature.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Can't put your iPhone away for long? Now, an app is here to de-addict you

    Can't put your iPhone away for long? Now, an app is here to de-addict you
     Can't put your iPhone away for long? Here comes an app that can help you de-addict from your smartphone, freeing up more time for you to spend with your family and friends.

    Can't put your iPhone away for long? Now, an app is here to de-addict you

    App that can make obese people agile

    App that can make obese people agile
    If you are used to a sedentary lifestyle, this app can help you become a little active.

    App that can make obese people agile

    Google makes voice search compatible with Indian diction

    Google makes voice search compatible with Indian diction
    Google Tuesday said it has upgraded the technology under which voice search features become compatible with Indian diction.

    Google makes voice search compatible with Indian diction

    Amnesty International launches app for activists in danger

    Amnesty International launches app for activists in danger
    Amnesty International has launched a new open source app called 'Panic Button’ to help activists facing imminent danger.

    Amnesty International launches app for activists in danger

    Now, a tool to predict financial pain from cancer

    Now, a tool to predict financial pain from cancer
    Along with distress that comes with cancer diagnosis and the discomfort of treatment, more patients now have to deal with "financial toxicity", the expense, anxiety and loss of confidence confronting those who face large, unpredictable costs.

    Now, a tool to predict financial pain from cancer

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers
    If you are a job seeker and a LinkedIn user, this app may just be for you.

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers