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ZME Science on MSNThe World’s Smallest Flying Robot Is Here. It Weighs Less Than a Raindrop and It’s Powered by Invisible ForcesResearchers at the University of California, Berkeley, have just unveiled the world’s smallest flying robot. With a wingspan of just 9.4 millimeters and weighing 21 milligrams — smaller than a grain ...
14d
Tech Xplore on MSNWant to 3D print a walking robot? Just ask your computer.Professor Boyuan Chen poses with some of his 3D printed robots that were ... to simply tell a computer what kind of robot to create. DURHAM, N.C. -- When personal computers were first invented, only a ...
They equipped it with a small, high-frequency imaging device to capture detailed 3D images of ... of the oloid shape could be applied to a variety of magnetic medical robots, potentially expanding ...
2mon
Tech Xplore on MSN3D-printed robots: Soft-jointed swarms tackle tough terrains and tasksand now it's starting to take physical shape with the creation of small, resilient, soft-jointed robots built with 3D ...
Magnetic composite with stiffness control allows programmable 3D shape shifting for use in soft robots, tactile interfaces, and reconfigurable displays.
It was 3D-printed in one continuous 58-hour step, composed of a single piece of soft and flexible thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU). Oh yes, and it has six legs.
This robot can walk, without electronics, and only with the addition of a cartridge of compressed gas, right off the 3D-printer. Imagine a robot that can walk, without electronics, and only with ...
If you've had to move house often, or needed to live in compact spaces, you'll love this. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon ...
The perhaps surprising key to the team's success was the use of a little-known 3D shape, the oloid, which gave the magnetic medical robot a previously impossible range of motion—the roll ...
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