If it looks like a fish, swims like a fish, and has a remarkably similar escape maneuver to a fish – it isnât necessarily a fish. It might be MITâs new self-contained swimming robot.
The life-like motion of the robotic fish is achieved when chambers along the fishâs “tail” are rapidly inflated and deflated with carbon dioxide stored within the robotâs body. This allows the fish to perform an incredibly realistic escape maneuver in which it entirely redirects its body in a quick 100 milliseconds.
So whatâs so important about achieving the natural motion of a fish here? Scientists hope that these robofish could someday be used to sneakily infiltrate schools of actual fish in order to study them up close and personal. Any sort of observations made would presumably be more accurate if the actual fish werenât constantly freaking out over what is obviously not one of them.
In addition to making it move more realistically, the soft body parts of the fish make it more attractive for interactions with humans. âAs robots penetrate the physical world and start interacting with people more and more, itâs much easier to make robots safe if their bodies are so wonderfully soft that thereâs no danger if they whack you,â explained Daniela Rus, director of MITâs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. The various molds for the soft body parts were made using a 3D printer.
All of the fish’s electronic controls are self contained in its “head” (MIT News)
This is not the first robot aimed at achieving the soft, flexible structure often found in living creatures. Check out these bots designed like earthworms that could sustain being crushed by a hammer, and these ones inspired by an octopusâ movement and color changing ability. In fact, this isnât even the first robotic fish MIT has built. Back in the 1990’s they made the Robotuna, a swimming automaton powered by six-separate motors.
Can you think of any alternative uses for this newest robotic fish? What other natural forms of locomotion are worth recreating with robotics? Are you also picturing an entire school of Robotunas feeding on these smaller fish-bots as an energy source? Cool. Us too.
HT: LiveScience, MIT News
First, a customary welcome to our fish overlords.
With video and sensors, I can see these for use in dangerous situations. For example, they can swim in bodies of water near holding tanks checking for leakage, or dangerous levels of radioactive or caustic emissions. If you make them dolphin or killer whale size, and Europa has an under ice ocean, then they could be extranautical explorers.