Video Friday: Nanotube-Powered Insect Robots
Video Friday is your weekly selection of awesome robotics videos, collected by your Automaton bloggers. We'll also be posting a weekly calendar of upcoming robotics events for the next few months; here's what we have so far (send us your events!):
HRI 2021 - March 8-11, 2021 - [Online Conference] RoboSoft 2021 - April 12-16, 2021 - [Online Conference] ICRA 2021 - May 30-5, 2021 - Xi'an, ChinaLet us know if you have suggestions for next week, and enjoy today's videos.
If you've ever swatted a mosquito away from your face, only to have it return again (and again and again), you know that insects can be remarkably acrobatic and resilient in flight. Those traits help them navigate the aerial world, with all of its wind gusts, obstacles, and general uncertainty. Such traits are also hard to build into flying robots, but MIT Assistant Professor Kevin Yufeng Chen has built a system that approaches insects' agility.
Chen's actuators can flap nearly 500 times per second, giving the drone insect-like resilience. You can hit it when it's flying, and it can recover," says Chen. It can also do aggressive maneuvers like somersaults in the air." And it weighs in at just 0.6 grams, approximately the mass of a large bumble bee. The drone looks a bit like a tiny cassette tape with wings, though Chen is working on a new prototype shaped like a dragonfly.
[ MIT ]
National Robotics Week is April 3-11, 2021!
[ NRW ]
This is in a motion capture environment, but still, super impressive!
[ Paper ]
Thanks Fan!
Why wait for Boston Dynamics to add an arm to your Spot if you can just do it yourself?
[ ETHZ ]
This video shows the deep-sea free swimming of soft robot in the South China Sea. The soft robot was grasped by a robotic arm on HAIMA' ROV and reached the bottom of the South China Sea (depth of 3,224 m). After the releasing, the soft robot was actuated with an on-board AC voltage of 8 kV at 1 Hz and demonstrated free swimming locomotion with its flapping fins.
Um, did they bring it back?
[ Nature ]
Quadruped Yuki Mini is 12 DOF robot equipped with a Raspberry Pi that runs ROS. Also, BUNNIES!
[ Lingkang Zhang ]
Thanks Lingkang!
Deployment of drone swarms usually relies on inter-agent communication or visual markers that are mounted on the vehicles to simplify their mutual detection. The vswarm package enables decentralized vision-based control of drone swarms without relying on inter-agent communication or visual fiducial markers. The results show that the drones can safely navigate in an outdoor environment despite substantial background clutter and difficult lighting conditions.
[ Vswarm ]
A conventional adopted method for operating a waiter robot is based on the static position control, where pre-defined goal positions are marked on a map. However, this solution is not optimal in a dynamic setting, such as in a coffee shop or an outdoor catering event, because the customers often change their positions. We explore an alternative human-robot interface design where a human operator communicates the identity of the customer to the robot instead. Inspired by how [a] human communicates, we propose a framework for communicating a visual goal to the robot, through interactive two-way communications.
[ Paper ]
Thanks Poramate!
In this video, LOLA reacts to undetected ground height changes, including a drop and leg-in-hole experiment. Further tests show the robustness to vertical disturbances using a seesaw. The robot is technically blind, not using any camera-based or prior information on the terrain.
[ TUM ]
RaiSim is a cross-platform multi-body physics engine for robotics and AI. It fully supports Linux, Mac OS, and Windows.
[ RaiSim ]
Thanks Fan!
The next generation of LoCoBot is here. The LoCoBot is an ROS research rover for mapping, navigation and manipulation (optional) that enables researchers, educators and students alike to focus on high level code development instead of hardware and building out lower level code. Development on the LoCoBot is simplified with open source software, full ROS-mapping and navigation packages and modular opensource Python API that allows users to move the platform as well as (optional) manipulator in as few as 10 lines of code.
[ Trossen ]
MIT Media Lab Research Specialist Dr. Kate Darling looks at how robots are portrayed in popular film and TV shows.
Kate's book, The New Breed: What Our History with Animals Reveals about Our Future with Robots can be pre-ordered now and comes out next month.
[ Kate Darling ]
The current autonomous mobility systems for planetary exploration are wheeled rovers, limited to flat, gently-sloping terrains and agglomerate regolith. These vehicles cannot tolerate instability and operate within a low-risk envelope (i.e., low-incline driving to avoid toppling). Here, we present Mars Dogs' (MD), four-legged robotic dogs, the next evolution of extreme planetary exploration.
[ Team CoSTAR ]
In 2020, first-year PhD students at the MIT Media Lab were tasked with a special project-to reimagine the Lab and write sci-fi stories about the MIT Media Lab in the year 2050. But, we are researchers. We don't only write fiction, we also do science! So, we did what scientists do! We used a secret time machine under the MIT dome to go to the year 2050 and see what's going on there! Luckily, the Media Lab still exists and we met someone...really cool!" Enjoy this interview of Cyber Joe, AI Mentor for MIT Media Lab Students of 2050.
[ MIT ]
In this talk, we will give an overview of the diverse research we do at CSIRO's Robotics and Autonomous Systems Group and delve into some specific technologies we have developed including SLAM and Legged robotics. We will also give insights into CSIRO's participation in the current DARPA Subterranean Challenge where we are deploying a fleet of heterogeneous robots into GPS-denied unknown underground environments.
[ GRASP Seminar ]
Marco Hutter (ETH) and Hae-Won Park (KAIST) talk about Robotics Inspired by Nature."
Thanks Fan!
In this keynote, Guy Hoffman Assistant Professor and the Mills Family Faculty Fellow in the Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Cornell University, discusses The Social Uncanny of Robotic Companions."
[ Designerly HRI ]