World's Smallest Robotic Hand
BuzzSkyline writes "The world's smallest robotic hand has been built by Yen-Wen Lu and Chang-Jin "CJ" Kim at UCLA's Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department. The microhand can make a fist that can grasp objects smaller than a millimeter across. Check out the freaky video on the researchers' website of the microhand grabbing a blob that looks like a fish egg. The tiny hand is made of inert materials, making it ideal for handling gooey biological samples. Lu and Kim describe their microhand in a paper published October 16 in the journal Applied Physics Letters."
Finally something small enough to massage my... never mind.
can it play the world's smallest violin?
Consider a system that constantly monitors internal systems (that's already in place). A problem is identified, and a swarm of robotic workers immediately moves out to fix the problem. Could this be ther first step to a sort of nanite repair system?
10 posts and no-one's mentioned "Waldo" yet?
From Wikipedia (Waldo (short story)):
The primary application for these hands is obvious: build even smaller ones!
Sean Ellis
Follow OfQuack's antics on Twitter.
Microsurgery? Lab-on-a-chip processing? Little assembly lines where the robot hand gently grabs an ovum, fertilizes it with the help of another little hand, and moves it to the nursery where we grow clones to take over the world? Just a thought.
Hmm, a few questions for these guys:
(1) Why is the "video" not a video, but just a few stills?
(2) Why does the video not show the "hand" letting go of the object?
A cynical person might suspect
(1) The "video" was selected from a larger sequence, some frames of which might not show the hand acting so gracefully.
(2) They didnt show the hand letting go of an object because they havent figured out how to undo the effects of surface tension, which spell doom for nano-manipulators.
When they show the "hand" in full-frame unedited video, picking up and letting go of several objects, then maybe they'll have some credibility.