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Robot Balances on a Single Spherical Wheel

dalangalma writes "Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute have developed a new kind of robot called the Ballbot that balances on a steel ball. Using a mechanism similar to a ball mouse, the Ballbot uses rollers to drive its single, spherical wheel and balance in place or glide around the room. The promise of such dynamically stable robots is that they can be much taller without having to have a wide base, making them much more suitable for working with humans. They are also much more agile, since they can be pushed out of the way easily without falling over. You can read the press release or check out the project's web page when it recovers from traffic."

5 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. Familiar? by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's been a loooong time since I watched the show, but didn't the Jetson's have a robot like this?

  2. Re:i'm surprised this hasnt come around sooner... by Mark+Programmer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Similar, but different.

    The overall concept is the same (in the sense that you have a system to balance and probably similar mathematics to do it), but the single point of contact with the ground makes for a different solution matrix. Segways need only balance in one dimension; this robot has to account for two, and it must solve for its balance with one manipulator. To add to the complexity, it must also navigate and motivate itself; a Segway's navigation system takes advantage of the sensors and processor installed in all of its cargo (a handy feature!) to offset the 'heavy lifting' of directional goals.

    I believe this project may also pre-date the segway by a few years, if you look at the papers published on it.

    --

    Take care,
    Mark

    There is a solution...

  3. Power issues, thinness by Mark+Programmer · · Score: 5, Informative

    FTA:

    "When Ballbot is not in operation, it stands in place on three retractable legs."

    So 'nervous balance' motions won't be necessary, one could assume.

    As for the thinness issue: it is precisely the personal space issue that makes a thin robot useful in a crowded public space. Our perception of personal space factors in the personal space of the other person. So a robot that is as wide as one's 'personal space bubble' causes people interacting with it to give it even more room. The thin chassis on this robot alleviates that problem by only taking up an amount of space roughly equivalent to the human torso, so that a person's "personal space guess" comes out accurately.

    --

    Take care,
    Mark

    There is a solution...

  4. Ballbot in action by novus+ordo · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are some videos available on youtube, in case you want to spare them some bandwidth.

    --
    "You're everywhere. You're omnivorous."
  5. Re:Piers Anthony alien race from Cluster? by smoker2 · · Score: 3, Informative
    The Polarians.

    "It was a tear drop shaped thing with a massive spherical wheel on the bottom and a limber tentacle or trunk at the top"

    They communicated by vibrating a smaller spherical ball on the end of the trunk against another object (ie the ground). AFAICR

    As for the sex, they chase each other round in an ever decreasing circle, incensed by each others trails, until they touch. Then the male polarian releases his large wheel and joins onto the females large wheel so that they both join at the seam. Then they spin the wheel until it springs into life and forms a child. After that, the female pinches the males communication wheel to use as a transit wheel, leaving him temporarily mute, and he gets to use his old transit wheel again.

    I can't believe I just described that !
    I do have the trilogy on the shelf though. It is the Cluster Trilogy by Piers Anthony, consisting of Vicinity Cluster, Chaining the Lady, and Kirlian Quest. Weird books, based around the transference of a beings aura across galactic distances and that aura inhabiting living "hosts" once transferred. Lots of tarot references too.