Government Technology

Photo of the Week: Swarm Robotics Harnesses the Productivity of an Insect Colony


December 18, 2012 By

If one robot can accomplish a singular task, think how much more could be accomplished if you had hundreds of them -- that's the thought University of Colorado Boulder Assistant Professor Nikolaus Correll had. 

And now, he and his research team are developing what's called "swarm robotics," which includes prototypes about the size of a ping-pong ball that they've named "droplets," according to the university.

The team recently created a swarm of 20 droplets, and when the droplets swarm together, Correll said they form a “liquid that thinks.”

According to the university, Correll "hopes to create a design methodology for aggregating the droplets into more complex behaviors such as assembling parts of a large space telescope or an aircraft."

Photo courtesy of University of Colorado at Boulder




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Comments

Tommy Simmons    |    Commented December 19, 2012

Liquid that thinks? More complex behaviors? Wasn't this the idea behind the nanobots that formed the liquid metal Terminator in T2? That thing could reassemble itself in any number of ways, and its collective AI presented almost insurmountable "thinking" ability.


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