Subscribe via RSS

Archives by Date
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008

See all Archives
Archives by Category
'Canes
Afghan Update
Ammo and Munitions
Armor
Around the Globe
Av Week Extra
Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere)
Bizarro
Blimps
Blog Bidness
Body Armor Blues
Bomb Squad
Brownshoes in Action
Bubbleheads, etc.
Cammo Green
Catch the "Buzz"
Chem-Bio
Civilian Apps
Cloak and Dagger
Commandos
Comms
Contingency Ops
Cops and Robbers
Cyber-warfare
Data Diving
Defense Tech Poll
Dissent Tech
Door Kickers
Drones
DT Administrivia
Eat DT's Dust
Extra! Extra!
Eye on China
Fast Movers
FCS Watch
Fire for Effect
FOS Files
Friday Funnies
Gadgets and Gear
Going Green
Grand Ole Osprey
Ground Vehicles
Guns
Homeland Security
In the Weeds with Eric
Info War
Iraq Diary
Jarhead Jazz
JSF Watch
Just War Theories
Lasers and Ray Guns
Less-lethal
Logistics
Los Alamos and Labs
M4 Monopoly
Medic!
Mercs
Missiles
Money Money Money
Most Wanted
MRAP Edge
Net-Centric
Nukes
Old Skool
Our Shrinking Planet
Planes, Copters, Blimps
Politricks
Polmar's Perspective
Popular Mechanics
Rapid Fire
Raptor Watch
Red Team
Retro-Futuro
Robots
Roll Your Own
Sabra Tech
Ships and Subs
Snipertech
Space
Special Ops
Star Wars
Strategery
Stray Trons
Tactical Development
Terror Tech
The Deadlies
The Defense Biz
The Peoples' Site
The Sunday Paper
The Tanker Tango
The View from Av Week
Those Nutty Norks
Training and Sims
Trimble on the Case
Video Lounge
War Update
Ward'z Wonderz
You can run...

See all Archives
Newsletters

Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

Not Quite T2...

T2.jpg

...but close.

From Military.com headlines:

Killer robots which can change their shape to squeeze under doors and through cracks in walls to track their prey are moving from the realms of science fiction to the front line in the fight against terrorism.

The US military has signed a GBP 1.6m deal with a technology firm to design robots which are intelligent enough to work out how to wiggle through small spaces to reach their target.

The action film, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, featured a seemingly unstoppable killer robot played by Robert Patrick. The machine was made from liquid metal and could change its form to slide under doors and walk through iron bars.

America's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) and the Army Research Office has awarded the contract to iRobot, which has developed other robots for the military.

They want scientists to come up with a design for a tiny robot able to move under its own power and change shape so it can get through gaps less than half an inch wide.

The US administration has not said what it wants the robot to do but its specification says: "Often the only available points of entry are small openings in buildings, walls, under doors, etc. In these cases, a robot must be soft enough to squeeze or traverse through small openings, yet large enough to carry an operationally meaningful payload."

In an effort to inspire creative ideas, the US military has pointed to examples in nature of creatures which are able to squeeze through narrow gaps and change their form.

Helen Greiner, co-founder and chairwoman of iRobot, said: "Through this programme, robots that reconstitute size, shape and functionality after traversal through complex environments will transcend the pages of science fiction to become real tools for soldiers in theatre."

But Scottish-based experts believe the challenge may be too much even for the US military's budgets and technology.

Mike Cates, professor of physics at Edinburgh University, said: "There are materials which can change their shapes and then regain them. There are alloys, known as memory metals, which are used in glasses and which can regain their shape. The difficulty in this case is all the other elements which need to be added to a device such as this, such as the circuitry and some form of system to propel it."

Brian Baglow, of technology firm Indoctrimat, said: "As well as designing the materials for this, the sensor systems will be a problem. It's not easy for them to work out where the gaps are which they can get through."

-- Christian

Comments

About 2 yrs ago, this was noted. http://www.dna.caltech.edu/Papers/DNAorigami-nature.pdf

If you can imagine using microfluidics and things like Sandia's structures here - http://mems.sandia.gov/gallery/images_gears_and_transmissions.html
- well, trust me that there are a thousand ways to have something small enough to tuck itself into a sliver of space yet deliver a very real level of threat and/or recon.

It is utter foolishness to think that it isn't already done by someone somewhere...

Posted by: LauraB at July 15, 2008 01:19 PM


" Real usefull..[sic]"

I said "a shape of a jointed piece of paper" not "made out of paper" Jimbo Jones. Apparently, your reading comprehension is right up there with your spelling. When you get those two figured out, we can move on to creativity.

Bill Tolbert, amen brother!

Posted by: Piotr at July 9, 2008 05:58 PM


Nay-sayers always think if they have not seen it, it can't be done. Think of all the amazing inventions that followed after someone's crazy ideas, then perhaps you may reconsider you opinion about its possibilies.

Posted by: bill tolbert at July 9, 2008 04:37 PM


"sounds like utter bollocks, pure waste of money but hey you yanks are damn good at throwing cash away with absurd procurment and R&D programs."

Yeah, Jimbo, like the Internet. Just look at how that total waste of money turned out.

Posted by: Robospam at July 9, 2008 04:23 PM


Think "Minority Report", where the little spider robots swarmed over the building Tom Cruise was in. All we'll have to do is look in all bathtubs and all the terrorists will be in there, perfect!

Posted by: CapnMack at July 9, 2008 12:13 PM


"- Propane/gases
- Irradated Army Ants
- Sexually Amped ferrociously multiplying Black Widow Spiders
- Oxygen transmutation
- Baking Bread Aroma (Lure them out!) LOL
- Heh, Heh... Suicide Bomber Army Ants with radio controlled itching powder bombs.
- UPS package from "Prize patrol" LOL
- Liquified Month old Egg Yolks
...outta here! "

All of those are better and more realistic ideas then this transformer wanna-be crap.

Posted by: Jimbo Jones at July 9, 2008 11:49 AM


- Propane/gases
- Irradated Army Ants
- Sexually Amped ferrociously multiplying Black Widow Spiders
- Oxygen transmutation
- Baking Bread Aroma (Lure them out!) LOL
- Heh, Heh... Suicide Bomber Army Ants with radio controlled itching powder bombs.
- UPS package from "Prize patrol" LOL
- Liquified Month old Egg Yolks
...outta here!

Posted by: Incognito 1 at July 9, 2008 11:35 AM



I thought we'd been through all this business with DARPA's Chemical Robot program last April -

http://edition.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/04/10/fs.robots/index.html

Posted by: Wembley at July 9, 2008 10:12 AM


"Make a robotic device with all its circuitry into a shape of a jointed piece of paper or carton and then you can change its shape. Don't think T1000, think Replicators from Stargate SG-1."

yeah cos a robotic milk carton sure is scary, this is a transcript from its last mission;
'look abdullah its one of them yank milk carton robots'
'what shall we do'
'stamp on it'
' problem solved put it in the recycling'

Real usefull...

Posted by: Jimbo Jones at July 9, 2008 04:54 AM


sounds like utter bollocks, pure waste of money but hey you yanks are damn good at throwing cash away with absurd procurment and R&D programs. Whole story made me LOL. No doubt when if you yanks get this to work, fat chance though, if you did you'd only gloat and tell the whole world how it works complete with the blueprints for all to see, pretty much like you do with all mil projects therefore letting the enemy develop its own copy for a tenth the price. I expect the drawings for this thing and how its going to work to appear on some news network within two years if it works out.

Posted by: Jimbo Jones at July 9, 2008 04:49 AM


The traditional means of asymmetric guerrilla forces and even traditional opponents of survival by positioning themselves in places we can't strike are about to go bye bye. Machines like this combined with NCW and BATS will make formidable weapons.

-DA

Posted by: DarthAmerica at July 9, 2008 01:00 AM


Nanobots or microbots for the job?
Or some way to "shape shift" robots.
Wow,.
Id invest.
Radical.
Place em on the US Mex border.
Bye bye Narcolords.
Send in some T2 killer robots & NO drug wars.

Posted by: stephen russell at July 8, 2008 11:02 PM


Make a robotic device with all its circuitry into a shape of a jointed piece of paper or carton and then you can change its shape. Don't think T1000, think Replicators from Stargate SG-1.

Posted by: Piotr at July 8, 2008 07:11 PM


Yeah, and I think they are going to call them the Mahmoud Ahmadinejad robots. Cause if you took all the hot air out of Ahmadinejad, he would be able to slide under a doorway...

Posted by: Kung Fu Panda at July 8, 2008 06:45 PM


If we can design computers one molecule at a time then designing an interlaced system in a liquid metal environment doesn't seem so strange. Why not create an architecture based on DNA in metal similar to memory metal. With new super computers we might be able to translate design elements into hardware in the not to distant future. Such a robot would also be able to walk around invisible, fly, travel under water, and even function in space which was all hinted at in T2, but would have made a poor movie.

Posted by: Franklin at July 8, 2008 05:30 PM


Or better yet, Tom Selleck's movie Runaway, with bug-like robots that could flatten themselves enough to go under doors.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088024/

Posted by: Foraker at July 8, 2008 03:12 PM


Sounds more like cockroachs than the T1000.

Posted by: old trooper at July 8, 2008 02:36 PM


Post a comment




Remember Me?


Please enter the code as seen in the image below to post your comment.