| AlphaGalileo
-- Inspired by cell biology, European researchers have
created the world’s first shape-shifting robot made
of many modules, which could lead to new applications
in fields ranging from medicine and space exploration
to education and entertainment.
On display at IST 2004 in The Hague
and being showcased on 17 November in Tokyo, the HYDRA
project’s robots have broken new ground in robotics
and artificial intelligence through a simple but highly
effective design that allows the devices to configure
themselves into almost any shape and perform a variety
of functions.
“We have shown that electronic artefacts
can change not only their behaviour but also their
shape during their lifetime, something that I don’t
think most people believed was possible,” explains
Henrik Hautop Lund, a professor at the Maersk Institute
in Denmark and the coordinator of the HYDRA project,
which was funded under the European Commission’s IST
Programme.
Over the last three years the Maersk
Institute, together with LEGO, the University of Edinburgh
and the University of Zurich, developed two types
of spherical modules, the ATRON and the HYDRON that
can operate autonomously, communicate with each other
and be programmed to take on virtually any shape and
behaviour. The HYDRON was developed for use in fluids
while the ATRON, which is the module being presented
widely this week, was created for terrestrial use.
“We based the design on the way biological
cells interact, how they move, die and reconstruct
themselves, and we emulated that in the modules, which
are essentially building blocks for robotic devices
that look very much like a string of atoms or cells
when connected together,” Lund says. “These are the
first robots of their kind, especially in terms of
the simplicity of their design and their ability to
change shape.”
Each ATRON module is an 11cm-diameter
sphere constructed from two hemispheres – a north
and south - that can rotate around the equator. Each
hemisphere has a set of male and female connectors
that allow it to hook together and operate in unison
with other modules – as few as one or two or as many
as several hundred.
“The more modules we have, the more
interesting the shapes we can produce and the functions
we can perform,” Lund says, noting that the project
partners have so far manufactured one hundred ATRON
units. “For example, the design could start off as
a small car with four modules touching the ground
and acting as wheels and other modules connecting
them. The car might come to a hole in a wall it can’t
fit through so the modules would communicate with
each other and transform into a snake. After it goes
through the hole the robotic snake finds itself faced
with a staircase. Now, because the snake can’t go
up the staircase it transforms itself into a climbing
device, goes up the stairs and reverts back to being
a car.”
Each of the modules are equipped with
infrared sensors to detect other modules and objects,
and infrared transmitters and receivers to communicate
with each other and receive orders. An onboard computer
system consisting of four small processors is the
artificial intelligence core of the modules allowing
the robots to operate autonomously, while additional
sensors measure movement, speed of rotation and degrees
of tilt. The male and female connectors, as well as
the rotation, are operated by small but powerful motors
that allow one module to move and hold two others,
while the hook design allows the modules to connect
quickly even if they are misaligned. Perhaps one of
the most innovative solutions developed by the project
refers to how the modules obtain power.
“Because each module is fitted with
a small battery, similar to the most advanced batteries
used in mobile phones, the problem we faced is what
to do when the battery of one module runs out, given
that in a complex formation the death of one module
would make the rest useless,” Lund explains. “We overcame
this problem by constructing the modules with electrically
grounded skeletons through which they can transfer
power allowing them to regenerate much like biological
cells.”
In fact, according to Lund, biological
cells could one day end up meeting these robotic brethren.
“This may be a far off vision, but
if we could bring these kinds of robots down to the
nano level there are possible uses for them in medicine,
where they could be used to repair the body internally,”
the coordinator says. “We can also envision them being
used to inspect hazardous environments or in space
exploration where they could replace devices such
as the Mars rovers because they would be more effective
at overcoming obstacles.”
In the shorter term, Lund sees potential
for the ATRON to be used in education and entertainment
– “a new concept in toys, more advanced than say the
AIBO dog or the WonderBorg robotic insect” – something
that has elicited great interest in Japan.
“Fundamentally, however, this is a
research project through which we have proven that
shape-shifting robots can be created,” Lund says.
“Now it’s a question of letting people know about
it and seeing what new horizons it opens up.”
Contact:
Professor Henrik Hautop Lund
Maersk Mc-Kinney Moller Institute for Production Technology
University of Southern Denmark
Campusvej 55,
DK-5230 Odense M,
Denmark
Tel: +45-6550-3574
Tel: +81-80-34697430 (Mobile in Japan)
Fax: +45-6615-7697
Email: hhl@mip.sdu.dk
http://www.hydra-robot.com
http://istresults.cordis.lu/
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