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

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds
    A new mobile app can measure respiratory rate in children roughly six times faster than the standard stop watch method.

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!
    Do you want to change your nail paint everyday but don't have enough time or patience? Worry not, a new app can take care of that.

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision
    Google glass may allow you to click pictures and do video recording on the go, but Oxford University researchers are now developing a "smart" glass that enables people with poor vision to spot obstacles and "see" movement and facial expressions.

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?
    While advertising for conventional cigarettes has long been prohibited in the US, e-cigarettes are being routinely advertised in traditional and social media including twitter, claims a new study.

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos
    Social networking site Facebook has launched a new app called Slingshot that allows people to share short-lived photos and videos with one another.

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos

    'Smart' eye-embedded device can manage glaucoma better

    'Smart' eye-embedded device can manage glaucoma better
    In a ray of hope for glaucoma patients, engineers have designed a first of its kind electronic sensor that can be placed permanently in a person's eye to track changes in eye pressure.

    'Smart' eye-embedded device can manage glaucoma better