(Web Desk) - Researchers in South Korea have built an artificial muscle that can lift approximately 4,000 times its own ...
ZME Science on MSN
This New Artificial Muscle Could Let Humanoid Robots Lift 4,000 Times Their Own Weight
This dual cross-linking design lets the muscle switch stiffness on demand. In lab tests, its stiffness jumps from about 213 kilopascals — soft, like rubber — to 292 megapascals, hundreds of times ...
Over the past two decades, synthetic biology has fueled advancements across a broad range of disciplines, including agriculture, bioremediation, biofuel production, and chemical manufacturing. Today, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
AI-powered muscles made from lifelike materials learn from body, perform safe actions
AI-powered muscles, made from lifelike materials, paired with intelligent control systems can perform motions that feels ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Human-centric soft robotics flip the script on 'The Terminator'
Pop culture has often depicted robots as cold, metallic, and menacing, built for domination, not compassion. But at Georgia ...
X’s Neo wants to be your housekeeper. First, it needs to be controlled by a human in your home. Cool with you?
Michael Fassnacht is former CEO of World Business Chicago and is now chief growth officer at Clayco in Chicago. You'll find his previous "Beyond the Status Quo" columns here.
GPU semiconductor factory, Jensen Huang’s roadmap connects data centers, networks, and industrial systems into a ...
Aligned with Duke Engineering’s Character Forward initiative, Professor Siobhan Oca’s Ethics in Robotics and Automation course (ME 490) challenges students to see beyond technical skills and practice ...
Recreate Mike Tyson’s bodyweight circuit to build explosive power, conditioning, and lean muscle. No gym required.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Robots you can wear like clothes: Automatic weaving of 'fabric muscle' brings commercialization closer
The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment ...
Once again, scientists have created something to give humanoid robots skills that no human possesses without asking themselves if it is truly a good idea.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results