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Battery-free robots use origami to change shape in mid-air

Battery-free robots use origami to change shape in mid-air
washington.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washington.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United States , Allen School , University Of Washington , Raul Villanueva , Alberto Aliseda , Shyam Gollakota , Vikram Iyer , Kyle Johnson , Tilboon Elberier , Mark Stone University Of Washington , National Science Foundation , Moore Foundation , Computer Science , Vicente Arroyos , Dennis Yin , Sawyer Fuller ,

University of Washington: Battery-Free Robots Utilize Origami to Alter Shape Mid-Air

Researchers at the University of Washington have developed small robotic devices that can change how they move through the air by “snapping” into a folded position during their descent.When these “microfliers” are dropped from a drone, they use a Miu ....

University Of Washington , United States , Allen School , Alberto Aliseda , Raul Villanueva , Kyle Johnson , Vikram Iyer , Shyam Gollakota , Tilboon Elberier , Moore Foundation , National Science Foundation , Mark Stone University Of Washington , Computer Science , Vicente Arroyos , Dennis Yin , Sawyer Fuller ,

Meet the origami robots – Gadget

Meet the origami robots – Gadget
gadget.co.za - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gadget.co.za Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

University Of Washington , United States , Allen School , Tilboon Elberier , Shyam Gollakota , Vikram Iyer , Alberto Aliseda , Kyle Johnson , Raul Villanueva , Moore Foundation , National Science Foundation , Computer Science , Vicente Arroyos , Dennis Yin , Sawyer Fuller ,

Battery-free origami microfliers from UW researchers offer a new bio-inspired future of flying machines

Researchers at the University of Washington developed small robotic devices that can change how they move through the air by "snapping" into a folded position during their descent. Shown here is a timelapse photo of the "microflier" falling in its unfolded state, which makes it tumble chaotically and spread outward in the wind. Photo by Mark Stone/University of Washington By Roger Van Scyoc On a cool afternoon at the heart of the University of Washington's campus, autumn, for a few fleeting moments, appears to have arrived early. Tiny golden squares resembling leaves flutter then fall, switching from a frenzied tumble to a graceful descent with a snap. Aptly named "microfliers" and inspired by Miura-fold origami, these small robotic devices can fold closed during their descent after being dropped from a drone. This "snapping" action changes the way they disperse and may, in the future, help change the way scientists study agriculture, meteor ....

University Of Washington , United States , Allen School , Shyam Gollakota , Vikram Iyer , Roger Van Scyoc , Kyle Johnson , Alberto Aliseda , Tilboon Elberier , Raul Villanueva , Allen School Ph , Intelligence Lab , Roger Van , Endowed Professor , Mobile Intelligence Lab , Vicente Arroyos , Dennis Yin , Engineering Literacy , Computer Science , Teenage News , Ids News , Top News , Breaking News , World News , Latest World News , World Breaking News ,