DJ Hero Review
Nissan's LandGlider Narrow track vehicles - the convergence of the car and the motorcycle
Emue and Visa Europe have been working closely over the past 18 months to develop the Visa... Anti-fraud credit card features E-Ink display
SPDY from Google's Chromium development team has achieved 55 percent faster page loading t... Google SPDY aims to make web faster
BMW has brought back the C1 as an electric-powered concept scooter called the C1-E E is for electric: The BMW C1-E concept scooter
Yes, that's supposed to be a piece of underwear. No, me neither. C-string makes your average thong look like grannypants (NSFW)
MORE TOP STORIES »
ROBOTICS

A robot that walks on water

By Loz Blain

22:00 June 26, 2007 PDT

An early CAD design of the Water Runner Robot, also showing the basilisk lizard's water-ru...

An early CAD design of the Water Runner Robot, also showing the basilisk lizard's water-running leg motions.

Image Gallery (4 images)

The NanoRobotics team at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) are working on a robot that walks on water, mimicking the Basilisk, or "Jesus Lizard" that's famous for its ability to dash across a water surface on its hind legs. Researchers see amphibious potential in the water-walking robot, as well as a possible efficiency boost in comparison to a boat, because a vehicle that runs across the surface of water experiences very little viscous drag. Computer simulations have been encouraging, demonstrating a few possible efficiency gains in the design and motion over the evolutionary model provided by the Basilisk, particularly with the option of using two or more sets of running legs. Several leg designs have been tested (see one in action in this video (MP4)) but the researchers are still working on an operating prototype.

The basilisk is well known for its ability to run across the surface of a body of water at a very fast rate of up to 1.5 metres per second. Check out this amusing video of the "Jesus Lizard" in action to see how it manages this. It's distinguished from other water-riding animals and insects by the fact that it doesn't use surface tension to keep it afloat, instead elevating and propelling itself by the slapping motion of its large, webbed feet.

The Water Runner Robot is designed to operate using the same principles. The CMU NanoRobotics research team spent a lot of time studying the motions of the basilisk to learn to mimic and then optimize the water-running motion to generate enough lift and thrust to sustain and move a robot far heavier than the lizard itself.

See the full research paper here (PDF).

Tags
Post a Comment

Login with your gizmag account:




Or Login with Facebook:


Connect
Gallery Images

Related Articles Email this article to a friend

Just enter your friends and your email address into the form below ...




Privacy is safe with us because we have a strict privacy policy.

Recent popular articles in Robotics
Recent Comments