car rental in kerala renting car lexus 600 hertz car rental dubai airport terminal 3 cheap car rental berlin schoenefeld airport cheapest car rental in dubai without deposit london car rental one click car rental car leasing dubai long term rental car dubai airport terminal 3 budget car hire cheap car rental tll full day car rental with driver in dubai car rentals sharjah hire car abu dhabi morning star rent a car photos rent a lamborghini dubai jet car water sport rental abu dhabi car hire 3 months taxi booking al ain renault rent a car corporate car hire surrey cheap car rental chicago o hare airport
  • Call-in Numbers: 917-633-8191 / 201-880-5508

  • Now Playing

    Title

    Artist

    Researchers from Université de Sherbrooke in Canada have created a robot arm that can be used by humans which has the dexterity to pick fruit.

    The type of arm developed is called a supernumerary robotic arm, in that it does not supplement any existing human limb but adds an extra one to the body.

    The arm has three degrees of freedom and is controlled by a hydraulic system connected to the user through a tether and controlled by another human being.

    Download the new Independent Premium app

    Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

    According to IEEE Spectrum, the arm weighs little over four kilograms, approximately the same as a human arm, although most of that weight comes from its external power source which has to be attached to the arm at all times.

    In terms of power, the arm can lift a five kilogram weight, meaning that it could be used for a number of tasks including painting walls, washing windows, handing tools to a human worker, or even playing badminton.

    Since the arm uses magnetorheological clutches, which can react very quickly, the grip can be applied and removed rapidly so as to not harm any human beings.

    While the arm does require another human to make it function, researchers have suggested that adding sensors or artificial intelligence would be able to have it complete tasks independently.

    "If we want that SRL [supernumerary robotic limb] to be multifunctional, it requires some AI or intelligent controller to detect what the human wants to do, and how the SRL could be complementary to the user (and act as a coworker). So there are a lot of things to explore in that vast field of 'human intent.'" Catherine Véronneau, lead author of the paper about the arm, said.

    This is not the only robotic development that has recently been achieved; researchers at Harvard developed a tiny microbot the size of a penny coin that could be used in surgeries or construction, based on an existing-larger model of the same robot.

    Read More


    Reader's opinions

    Leave a Reply