Cyborg Technology Finally Comes to Reality Using Real Biological Tissue. Tiny Walking Robots Powered by Muscle Cells
Scientific and Technological advances for the betterment of all man-kind continue to be made through the use of the mind, facts of reality, and men able to use both. From the article:
"Most robots are powered by electrical motors that are big, bulky, heavy, and if they break, you have to replace them. Animals, on the other hand, use a biological motor—a muscle—that also requires electricity, but is far more efficient and, given a chance, can repair itself. We're just starting to be able to manipulate biological structures like these in clever enough ways to let us harness their awesomeness, and engineers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have worked them into a tiny little "bio-bot" that uses muscle cells to walk."
Can you imagine the advances that could be made if government and supernatural beliefs weren't continually impeding such work?
"Most robots are powered by electrical motors that are big, bulky, heavy, and if they break, you have to replace them. Animals, on the other hand, use a biological motor—a muscle—that also requires electricity, but is far more efficient and, given a chance, can repair itself. We're just starting to be able to manipulate biological structures like these in clever enough ways to let us harness their awesomeness, and engineers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have worked them into a tiny little "bio-bot" that uses muscle cells to walk."
Can you imagine the advances that could be made if government and supernatural beliefs weren't continually impeding such work?
All Comments
- 2Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.I wonder when someone's going to ask where the muscle tissue comes from.Permalink|
- 2Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 9 months agoSuch bio-bots are not my area of expertise, but I did have a student group do a review article on them for my nanotech class. If anyone is further interested, send me a PM.Permalink|