“Bats have long captured the imaginations of scientists and engineers with their unrivaled agility, but their complex wing motions pose significant technological challenges for those seeking to recreate their flight in a robot. The key flight mechanisms of bats now have been recreated with unprecedented fidelity in the Bat Bot—a self-contained robotic bat with soft, articulated wings, developed by researchers at Caltech and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). “This robot design will help us build safer and more efficient flying robots, and also give us more insight into the way bats fly,” says Soon-Jo Chung, associate professor of aerospace and Bren Scholar in the Division of Engineering and Applied Science at Caltech, and Jet Propulsion Laboratory research scientist. (Caltech manages JPL for NASA.)”
Related Content
Related Posts:
- Verifying the Work of Quantum Computers
- A New Way to Erase Quantum Computer Errors
- Fiber Optic Cables Detect and Characterize Earthquakes
- New Wearable Sensor Sets Record for Solar Power Efficiency
- New Bioinspired Robot Flies, Rolls, Walks, and More
- New Device Opens Door to Storing Quantum Information as Sound Waves
- In a First, Caltech’s Space Solar Power Demonstrator Wirelessly Transmits Power in Space
- Quantum Entanglement of Photons Doubles Microscope Resolution
- Physicists Create New Model of Ringing Black Holes
- How Do Rocky Planets Really Form?