While Predator drones prove their mettle in Afghanistan and Pakistan,
a new generation of far smaller flying robots is taking shape in
various labs. These microfliers may soon take on a variety of military
missions and innovative humanitarian ones as well.
At the University of Waterloo in Ontario, microroboticist Behrad Khamesee
has developed a flying robot about the size of a pencil eraser. A pair
of laser-operated, fingerlike grippers allow the bot to grasp and
release small objects. The device operates wirelessly, powered by a
magnetic field. Khamesee hopes a version of the robot will someday zip
around inside the human body delivering targeted drugs; first he needs
to reduce the jitters in the bot’s motion.
Mechanical engineer Haibo Dong
of Wright State University in Ohio is working on a four-winged robot
called the Wright Dragonflyer. The design is more difficult to create
than a two-winged flapping system but promises greater speed and
maneuverability. Dong expects to have a prototype, about the size of a
real dragonfly, completed this year. “This small craft could perform
surveillance, environmental monitoring, and search and rescue,” he says.
Another insect-inspired robot is taking shape at Harvard University, where roboticist Robert Wood
is building on his 2007 development of a life-size mechanical fly to
create a colony of RoboBees. These swarming robots will incorporate
optical and chemical sensors as well as communication systems to make
autonomous flight decisions and to coordinate with colony members during
tasks such as searching for objects or people.
The military is in on the game too. The U.S. Army is teaming up with
BAE Systems and academic partners, including the University of Maryland
and the University of Pennsylvania, to build microfliers for
intelligence and surveillance through its Micro Autonomous Systems and
Technology Collaborative Alliance. “Our long-term goal is to develop
technologies that can produce a map of a building interior or detect
bombs,” says manager Joseph Mait of the Army Research Laboratory.
Current prototypes include a sparrow-size flapping-wing craft and
four-blade helicopter-style robots. The consortium will convene this
spring with potential users in the Army to review the current state of
the technologies.Source: http://discovermagazine.com/2010/mar/04-latest-trend-in-aircraft-really-tiny-microflier
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