Engineering:Intelligent Small World Autonomous Robots for Micro-manipulation
Intelligent Small World Autonomous Robots for Micro-manipulation (I-Swarm) is a European research project to develop millimeter-scale robots for dangerous activities. It is coordinated by Jörg Seyfried at the University of Karlsruhe in Germany. The robots operate on solar power and can communicate between each other.
Aims
The I-Swarm project aims to develop and produce a large scale swarm (up to 1,000[1]) of microrobots.[2]
Robots
The robots' proposed size is 2 x 2 x 1 mm. This small size means that sensory and computational capabilities will be limited. This is to be compensated for by collective behavior and emerging swarm effects.[3] The robots will differ in the type of sensors, manipulators and the amount of computational power.[4]
Activities
The robot swarm is expected to have a variety of applications, including micro assembly, biological, medical or cleaning tasks.[5]
References
- ↑ ISWARM, University of Karlsruhe, Research and Innovation in Baden-Württemberg http://www.wissenschaftwirtschaft-bw.de/index.php4?topic=universitaet&uni_id=6&profile_id=28
- ↑ IPR Publications, 2004, Abstract http://wwwipr.ira.uka.de/en/Publications/detailed_publication.htm?id=1095254176
- ↑ IPR Publications, 2004, Abstract http://wwwipr.ira.uka.de/en/Publications/detailed_publication.htm?id=1095254176
- ↑ COGNIRON Links, I-SWARM, http://www.cogniron.org/Links.php
- ↑ COGNIRON Links, I-SWARM, http://www.cogniron.org/Links.php
External links