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Like A Cat, New Robot Lands On Its Feet

eckenheimer writes "Students at the Physics Department at Drury University have developed a robot that uses motions and contortions of its body to orient itself in zero gravity. According to the project site, 'If you've ever seen a cat land on its feet after falling while upside down then you've seen the idea behind our project.' The effort is a proposal for the NASA Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program."

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  1. Excuse me? by smcn · · Score: 1, Redundant

    They get one step closer to a humane perpetual motion machine and they're wasting this research on ZERO-G ORIENTATION?